Case Information
*1 Before: MOORE and COLE, Circuit Judges; WISEMAN, District Judge. [*] _________________
COUNSEL ARGUED: Donald S. Bernstein, DAVIS, POLK & WARDWELL, New York, New York, Glenn E. Siegel, DECHERT, New York, New York, for Appellants. David M. Bernick, KIRKLAND & ELLIS, Chicago, Illinois, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Donald S. Bernstein, Ogden N. Lewis, Michael S. Flynn, DAVIS, POLK & WARDWELL, New York, New York, Glenn E. Siegel, DECHERT, New York, New York, Sheryl L. Toby, DYKEMA GOSSETT, Detroit, Michigan, Annette W. Jarvis, Salt Lake City, Utah, Robert S. Hertzberg, PEPPER & HAMILTON, Detroit, Michigan, Andrew N. Rosenberg, PAUL, WEISS, RIFKIND, WHARTON & GARRISON, New York, New York, Patrick A. Murphy, MURPHY, WEIR & BUTLER, San Francisco, California, Stephen Blauner, MILBANK, TWEED, HADLEY & McCLOY, New York, New York, Robert M. Novick, KASOWITZ, BENSON, TORRES & FRIEDMAN, New York, New York, for Appellants. David M. Bernick, Douglas Geoffrey Smith, KIRKLAND & ELLIS, Chicago, Illinois, for Appellees.
_________________
OPINION
_________________
R. GUY COLE, JR., Circuit Judge. Numerous bankruptcy creditors of Dow Corning Corp., who collectively hold approximately $1 billion in commercial debt, argue that the bankruptcy court erred in only allowing claims for post-petition interest at the non-default contract rate, as identified in their debt contracts, rather than at the contracts’ default rate. Dow Corning argues in a cross- appeal that the bankruptcy court should have ordered the payment of post-petition interest at the non-default variable rate required by the contracts, rather than at a numerically fixed rate as of the date of the bankruрtcy filing. Finally, the creditors argue that they should be awarded their attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses, since Dow Corning has always been fully solvent and is still solvent post-bankruptcy. Because solvent-debtor cases present a situation where all parties ought to be granted the benefit of their bargains, unless the equities compel a contrary result, we VACATE the judgments below and REMAND for reconsideration consistent with this opinion.
I. BACKGROUND
Dow Corning is a joint venture wholly owned by its two shareholders, Dow Chemical Co. and Corning Corp. On May 15, 1995, Dow Corning filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. [1] Unlike most debtors in bankruptcy, Dow Corning was fully solvent at the time it filed its bankruptcy case; it has remained so throughout the proceedings and has never disputed its ability to pay all of its creditors. Rather, the purpose of the bankruptcy petition was to enable prompt and uniform settlement of the numerous breast-implant-related lawsuits pending against Dow Corning at the time of the petition.
During years of negotiations and settlements, Dow Corning continued its business and did not make any payments on its more than $1 billion in unsecured debt. When a reorganization plan was finally proposed in 1999, it included provisions for payment of the principal amount of all of the unsecured debt, along with post-petition interest at the “federal judgment rate” of 6.28%, compounded annually. The majority of the unsecured commercial debt contracts would have required a rate higher than the federal judgment rate. Not surprisingly, the unsecured commercial debt holders (hereinafter “Class 4” or the “Class 4 creditors”) voted overwhelmingly against the plan. These creditors are the appellants in this case.
Under the Bankruptcy Code, a plan may not be confirmed by a court over the objection of a class
of creditors unless, among other things, the following requirements are met: (1) under the plan, the
class would receive an amount that is equal to or greater than the amount they would receive if the
debtor’s assets were liquidated,
see
11 U.S.C. § 1129(a)(7); and (2) the plan is found to be fair and
equitable,
see
11 U.S.C. § 1129(b)(1). By incorporating the fair and equitable standard in § 1129(b)
of the Code, Congress codified the “absolute priority rule,” whiсh provides that absent full
satisfaction of a creditor’s allowed claims, no member of a class junior in priority to that creditor
may receive anything at all on account of their claim or equity interest.
See Case v. L.A. Lumber
Prods. Co.
,
After hearing the objections, the bankruptcy court overruled Class 4’s first objection,
determining that Class 4 was going to be paid at least as much as it would have received had Dow
Corning’s assets been liquidated.
In re Dow Corning Corp.
,
Where the debtor is solvent , the bankruptcy rule is that where there is a contractual provision, valid under state law, providing for interest on unpaid installments of interest, the bankruptcy court will enforce the contractual provision with respect to both instalments [sic] due before and . . . after the petition was filed. . . . This rule is fair and equitable inasmuch as the solvent debtor’s estate will have been enriched by the bankruptcy trustee’s use of money which the debtor had promised to pay promptly to the creditor, and, correspondingly, the creditor will have been deprived of the opportunity to use the money to his advantage. Moreover, the rule does not in any way affect any creditor other than the claimant of interest on interest. . . .The Proponents [of the proposed plan] made only a half-hearted effort to persuade the Court that use of the statutory interest rate is fair. They directed the Court’s attention to our prior decision, in which we stated in dictum that “the payment of post-petition interest at the federal judgment rate does not provide a windfall to debtors and its use cannot be seen as . . . inequitable to unsecured creditors.” Dow Corning , 237 B.R. at 409. This statement, however, was premised on the view that a chapter 7 creditor’s pre-petition contractual rights are essentially replaced by, or merged into, the allowed claim. See Dow Corning ,237 B.R. at 391-92, 405, 409 . That is not the case with respect to a chapter 11 claim.
In re Dow Corning Corp.
,
The plan was to take effect in June 2004, and between 1999 and 2004, Dow Corning and its
creditors litigated the validity of the claims that would be paid under the plan. Dow Corning
objected to Class 4’s claims for money due under a default rate of interest, in addition to other post-
petition fees, costs, and expenses. Class 4 moved for summary judgment with regard to these
claims. In April 2001, the bankruptcy court held a hearing on these objections, and ruled in favor
of Dow Corning. With regard to the default interest rate, the court found that it had not initially
awarded default interest, and that Class 4 did not have an automatic right to such interest. It noted
that the amended plan provided for post petition interest at “the applicable contract rate . . . in effect
on May 15, 1995, the date Dow Corning’s bankruptcy case commenced.” The court ruled it could
not award default interest given that there was no evidence that it would be fair and equitable to
award additional default interest and because Dow Corning had not been in default on the date of
the bankruptcy filing. With regard to post-petition fees, costs and expenses, the court found that
CPT Holdings, Inc. v. Industrial & Allied Employees Union Pension Plan
,
Local 73
,
Pursuant 28 U.S.C. § 158(a), Class 4 appealed each of these decisions to the district court. The district court determined first that the bankruptcy court’s default interest decision was an interpretation of the terms of the plan, and did not effect a modification of the plan, and was thus subject to abuse-of-discretion review. In re Dow Corning Corp. , No. 01-CV-71843-DT, 2004 WL 764654, at *3 (E.D. Mich. March 31, 2004). The district court then found that the bankruptcy court’s holding was not an abuse of discretion, noting that numerous bankruptcy courts have chosen not to award default interest even though it was provided for in underlying debt contracts. The district court upheld the bankruptcy court’s determinations that the original plan had not included default interest, and that Class 4 had not established that the plan would violate §1129(b)’s fair-and- equitable standard absent payment of default interest. Id . at *9-10. Accordingly, the district court affirmed the decision of the bankruptcy court with regard to default interest, determining that the relevant interest rate would be “the base contract rate in effect between the parties at the time the Petition was filed, and not the default rate, unless the individual claimant can show that [Dow Corning] defaulted pre-petition.” Id . at *10.
Next, the district court addressed the issue of attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses. It disagreed with the bankruptcy court that CPT Holdings overruled Martin , but nonetheless agreed that these charges were not recoverable by the Class 4 creditors. Id . Relying on several Ninth Circuit cases, the district court reasoned that the Bankruptcy Code allows costs incurred in litigating the validity of a pre-petition contract, but does not allow costs related to recovering required cоntract payments in a subsequent federal bankruptcy proceeding. It thus affirmed the bankruptcy court’s determination that Class 4 could not recover its fees and costs. Id . at *11-12.
Finally, the parties requested clarification as to the applicable “contract rate in effect at the time of the petition.” Dow Corning argued that the plan called for the applicable interest rate on these instruments to vary just as it had pre-petition, as a “formulaically-fixed” rate. Class 4 argued that the bankruptcy court had set the rate to be fixed at the actual numerical value of the formula as of the date the petition was filed. After examining the bankruptcy court’s written and oral opinions, as well as language used in its own prior holdings, the district court held that the bankruptcy court had intended to set a numerically-fixed interest rate and that it had not abused its discretion in doing so. The district court thus entered an order setting a fixed rate for the payment of post-petition interest, equal to the rate applicable in each debt contract on the day the petition was filed.
The Class 4 creditors timely appealed the decisions on default interest and costs, [2] and Dow Corning cross-appealed the decision with regard to the numerically-fixed rate of interest. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(d).
II. INTEREST RATE
In its 2001 oral decision, the bankruptcy court held that Dow Corning’s 1999 verbal amendment of the plan required that the applicable rate of pendency interest be the contract rate in effect between the parties at the time the petition was filed, as opposed to the default rate. Reviewing for abuse of discretion, the district court affirmed the bankruptcy court’s decision and entered an order setting a fixed interest rate equal to the rate applicable to each debt contract on the day Dow Corning’s petition was filed. The Class 4 creditors appeal the district court’s decision insofar as it affirms the bankruptcy court’s order awarding interest at the non-default rate. Dow Corning appeals the district court’s decision that post-petition interеst is payable at the numerically-fixed interest rate.
1. Standard of Review
The standard of review which we apply to the bankruptcy court’s decision depends on whether
that decision resulted in a modification of the amended plan, and thus was made in reliance upon
or was based on an interpretation of the Bankruptcy Code, or rather simply involved the bankruptcy
court’s interpretation of that plan. In
In re Terex
,
Following
In re Terex
, Dow Corning argues that the bankruptcy court’s decision should be
reviewed for abuse of discretion, because the decision was an interpretation of the amended plan’s
language in exercise of that court’s equitable power to award interest. The Class 4 creditors argue
that the bankruptcy court’s decision should be reviewed
de novo
, because they argue that its 2001
decision effectively modified the amended plan, and thus involved an interpretation of § 1129(b) of
the Code. Alternatively, they argue that because, in interpreting the plan, the bankruptcy court did
not exercise its equitable powers, the abuse-of-discretion standard applied in
In re Terex
should not
govern. Rather, they argue, the bankruptcy court’s interpretation of the plan is analogous to the
interpretation of a contract, and thus should be reviewed
de novo
.
See Yolton v. El Paso Tenn.
Pipeline Co.
,
In
In re Terex
, we held that if a bankruptcy court’s interpretation of a plan does not require
interpretation of the Bankruptcy Code, review for abuse of discretion is appropriate.
In re Terex
,
Thus, if the bankruptcy court’s 2001 decision is an interpretation of the amended plan, it is entitled to deference by this Court, and we will review it for abuse of discretion. In order to determine whether the court’s decision merely interpreted the plan, as opposed to modifying it, “we turn to the reasoning and language in the bankruptcy court’s [2001] order.” In re Terex , 984 F.2d at 172. The language of the bankruptcy court’s 2001 decision makes clear that it was only interpreting the amended рlan, not modifying it. In the bankruptcy court’s view, “a straightforward application of the plan terms would mean that the creditors are entitled only to the base contract rate of interest. The creditors would therefore appear to be precluded from seeking to impose a higher rate now.” The court denied the Class 4 creditors’ objections on the grounds that default interest would be in conflict with the terms of the plan. “In the present case the Court does not see how one can reconcile the creditors’ demand for default-rate interest with the plan’s provisions for application of the interest rate in effect when Dow Corning filed its petition.” This language from the bankruptcy court’s opinion strongly suggests that it did not intend to modify the terms of the amended plan in its 2001 decision, but rather only interpreted it in light of the Class 4 creditors’ objections. Given that the bankruptcy court’s 2001 decision merely interpreted, rather than modified, the amended plan, we review its decision for abuse of discretion. 2. Merits
The Class 4 creditors argue that the bankruрtcy court abused its discretion in two ways: (1) by incorrectly interpreting its prior language and thus effectively modifying the plan; and (2) by adopting an interpretation of the plan caused it to violate § 1129(b)’s fair-and-equitable standard.
a. Incorrect Interpretation
First, the Class 4 creditors argue that the bankruptcy judge incorrectly interpreted its 1999
decision. The verbally amended plan included the following clause: “[P]endency interest will be
paid to Class 4 creditors in accordance with the terms of [their] contracts.”
In re Dow Corning
Corp.
,
In interpreting a confirmed plan, courts use contract principles, since the plan is effectively a
new contract between the debtor and its creditors.
See Hillis Motors, Inc. v. Hawaii Auto. Dealers’
Ass’n
,
Here, the amended plan required that pendency interest, defined as “interest that accrues for the
time frame beginning with the commencement of this case and ending on the effective date of the
Plan,”
In re Dow Corning Corp.
,
We disagree with the bankruptcy court’s conclusion that the plan was unambiguous. The phrase “at the applicable contract rate” could have any one of several other reasonable meanings, including both “at the non-default contract rate in effect on the date of thе petition” and “at the varying rate provided for by the contracts should Dow fail to make a payment.” Furthermore, at the time it orally added the “at the applicable contract rate” term to the plan, the bankruptcy court purported to be sustaining Class 4’s objections regarding the proper interest rate payable on the claims held by members of that class, lending significant weight to Class 4’s argument that this term is ambiguous.
Although we disagree that the language is unambiguous, the bankruptcy court’s ultimate
interpretation of that language did not constitute an abuse of discretion. The plan’s language–
“[e]ach allowed unsecured claim in Class 4 shall include interest thereon from the petition date
through the effective date at the applicable contract rate”– is not inconsistent with the bankruptcy
court’s interpretation precluding default interest. Though “the applicable contract rate” could mean
several things, one reasonable interpretation of that phrase is the base applicable contract rate on the
date of the petition. And since that language is susceptible to more than one interpretation and we
give significant deference to the bankruptcy court’s decision, the Class 4 creditors have not met the
extremely difficult burden of demonstrating on appeal that the bankruptcy court incorrectly
interpreted its own prior language or intent.
See, e.g.
,
Terex
,
b. Section 1129(b)’s Fair-and-Equitable Standard
Although the bankruptcy court did not abuse its discretion by interpreting the plan as requiring the payment of pendency interest at a non-default, fixed rate, the bankruptcy court still may have done so if it construed the plan in such a way as to cause it to violate § 1129(b)’s fair and equitable requirement. Class 4 argues that the bankruptcy court abused its discretion by interpreting the plan in such a way as to produce a result that violates that section of the Bankruptcy Code, insofar as they will not recover the full value of their claim, while Dow Corning’s shareholders, whose equity interests are undisputably junior to the claims held by Class 4, will retain millions of dollars.
Although bankruptcy courts have broad equitable powers that extend to approving plans of
reorganization,
United States v. Energy Res. Co., Inc.
,
When one or more class of creditors refuses to accept a plan of reorganization, as did Class 4
here, a bankruptcy court may approve the plan over the objections of the dissenting class only if two
criteria are mеt. First, as with any plan of reorganization, all of the requirements of §1129(a) – save
acceptance by each class of creditors – must be met.
See
§ 1129(a)(8). Second, 11 U.S.C. § 1129(b)
requires that the plan be fair and equitable. As previously explained, a plan is deemed fair and
equitable as to a dissenting class of unsecured creditors only if it does not violate the absolute
priority rule–i.e., the allowed value of the claims held by that class is to be paid in full, or “the
holder of any claim junior to the claims of such class will not receive or retain under the plan on
account of such junior claim any property.”
Bank of Am. Nat’l. Trust & Sav. Ass’n v. 203 LaSalle
Street P’ship
,
Of course, the absolute priority rule applies with equal force when the debtor is sоlvent, as is the case here. Consolidated Rock Prods. Co. v. Du Bois , 312 U.S. 510, 527 (1941). “Whether a company is solvent or insolvent in either the equity or the bankruptcy sense, ‘any arrangement of the parties by which the subordinate rights and interests of the stockholders are attempted to be secured at the expense of the prior rights’ of creditors ‘comes within judicial denunciation.’” Id. (citing Louisville Trust Co. v. Louisville, New Albany & Chicago Ry. Co. , 174 U.S. 674, 684 (1899)). The absolute priority rule imposes somewhat different requirements when a solvent debtor seeks confirmation of its plan. The legislative history of the Bankruptcy Code makes clear that equitable considerations operate differently when the debtor is solvent: “[C]ourts have held that where an estate is solvent, in order for a plan to be fair and equitable, unsecured and undersecured creditors’ claims must be paid in full, including postpetition interest, before equity holders may participate in any recovery.” 140 Cong. Rec. H10,752-01, H10,768 (1994) (statement of Rep. Brooks, Chairman of the Committee on the Judiciary and co-author of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1994). Class 4 argues that in the context of a solvent debtor, the absolutе priority rule requires the award of interest at the default rate.
Since solvent bankruptcy estates are somewhat of a rarity, it comes as no surprise that the
majority of courts to consider whether to award default interest have done so in the context of an
insolvent debtor. In those cases, bankruptcy courts have concluded that default interest need not
be awarded in every instance for a plan to pass muster under § 1129(b)(1). Instead, bankruptcy
courts analyze whether § 1129(b) requires the payment of default interest on a case-by-case basis.
In
In re Casa Blanca Project Lenders, L.P.
,
By contrast, in solvent debtor cases, rather than considering equitable principles, courts have
generally confined themselves to determining and enforcing whatever pre-petition rights a given
creditor has against the debtor.
See, e.g.
,
Chicago
,
[w]here the debtor is solvent, the bankruptcy rule is that where there is a contractual
provision, valid under state law, providing for interest on unpaid instalments of interest, the
bankruptcy court will enforce the contractual provision with respect to both instalments due
before and . . . after the petition was filed. . . .
Debentureholders Protective Comm. of Cont’l Inv. Corp. v. Cont’l Inv. Corp.
,
Based on this application of the absolute priority rule in solvent debtor cases, Class 4 argues that
we should enforce their rights under the contract, including their right to interest awarded at the
default rate as set forth in the terms of their contract. To do otherwise (i.e., to interpret the amended
plan as not requiring the payment of default interest), they argue, would violate §1129(b)’s fair and
equitable standard. We agree. Default interest rates are intended to transfer some of the risk of
default from creditors to the debtor.
Chicago
,
Dow Corning’s argument that Class 4 did not meet its burden of proving that the equities of this
case require the payment of default interest is unpersuasive. Courts in solvent debtor cases have
overwhelmingly concluded that there is a presumption that the default interest rate should be
allowed.
See Southland Corp.
,
The record before us is not sufficiently developed for us to determine whether the general rule calling for the payment of default interest in solvent debtor cases, when considered with other equitable factors, makes the award of default interest appropriate in this case. We therefore remand this matter to the district court, with instructions to remand it to the bankruptcy court, for proceedings consistent with this decision, including the consideration of any equitable factors affecting the interest rate. Given our decision, Dow Corning’s appeal from the bankruptcy court’s order awarding interest at a non-variable rate is moot.
III. FEES, COSTS AND EXPENSES
The bankruptcy court’s 1999 decision confirming the amended plan awarded the Class 4
creditors all fees, costs and expenses to the extent that they are allowable under applicable law. In
its 2001 decision, the bankruptcy court held that the law of this circuit, as set forth in
CPT Holdings,
Inc. v. Industrial & Allied Employees Union Pension Plan, Local 73
,
1. Bankruptcy Code
A proof of claim filed under 11 U.S.C. § 501 is deemed an allowed claim “unless a party in
interest . . . objects.”
See In re Welzel
,
Despite the fact that § 502 does not, on its face, prohibit the recovery of post-petition attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses, Dow Corning argues that Congress intended to preclude such recovery by creditors with undersecured claims. Dow Corning points to §506(b) of the Code, entitled “Determination of secured status,” which states:
To the extent that an allowed secured claim is secured by property the value of which, after any recovery under subsection (c) of this section, is greater than the amount of such claim, there shall be allowed to the holder of such claim, interest on such claim, and any reasonable fees, costs, or charges provided for under the agreement or state statute under which such claim arose.
11 U.S.C. § 506(b). That section explicitly allows the holder of an oversecured claim to recover
reasonable post-petition fees, costs and expenses.
See In re Hatcher
,
Dow Corning argues that § 506(b) expressly limits the recovery of such fees to creditors whose
claims are oversecured, because although Congress could have made fees available to all claimants,
it did not do so. In so arguing, Dow Corning invokes the statutory construction maxim
expressio
unius est exclusio alterius.
“Where Congress explicitly enumerates certain exceptions to a general
prohibition, additional exceptions are not to be impliеd, in the absence of evidence of a contrary
legislative intent.”
TRW Inc. v. Andrews
,
The courts that deny recovery of attorneys’ fees, costs, and expenses to unsecured claims rely not only on the expressio unius rule, but they also analogize post-petition fees, costs and expenses to post-petition interest. It is undisputed that unsecured creditors are generally prohibited from recovering post-petition interest, because claims for unmatured interest are explicitly prohibited under § 502(b). See 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(2) (providing that bankruptcy courts cannot allow a claim for “unmatured interest”). Section 506(b) explicitly allows oversecured creditors to recover postpetition interests on their claims, thereby exempting them from the strictures of § 502(b) to the extent their claims are oversecured. See § 11 U.S.C. 506(b) (“To the extent that an allowed secured claim is secured by property the value of which . . . there shall be allowed to the holder of such claim . . . interest on such claim.”).
In
United Sav. Ass’n of Texas v. Timbers of Inwood Forest Assoc., Ltd.
,
Although persuasive, the cases cited by Dow Corning and relied on by the bankruptcy court dealt
exclusively with the recovery of attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses from insolvent bankruptcy
estates, a question not before us today. Although
Timbers
states that, as a general rule, undersecured
creditors cannot recover interest on their collateral, the Court noted that in the “admittedly rare” case
when the debtor proves solvent, both undersecured and wholly unsecured creditors can recover
interest.
Timbers
,
Our decision is consistent with the decision by other courts that have considered whether
unsecured creditors can collect attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses from solvent debtors.
See In re
United Merchs. & Mfrs., Inc
.,
We therefore choose to join the body of cases holding that unsecured creditors may recover their attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses from the estate of a solvent debtor where they are permitted to do so by the terms of their contract and applicable non-bankruptcy law.
2. Law of this Circuit
Having determined that nothing in the Bankruptcy Code prohibits an unsecured creditor from
recovering attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses from a solvent debtor, we must consider whether the
law of this circuit places any limitations of the extent to which creditors may recover those
reimbursements to which they are contractually entitled. The Class 4 creditors argue that
In re
Martin
,
In determining that Class 4 was not entitled to recover those attorneys’s fees, costs and expenses,
the district court rejected the bankruptcy court’s reasoning that
In re Martin
governs the Class 4
creditor’s recovery in this case, and instead relied on
CPT Holdings, Inc. v. Industrial & Allied
Employees Union Pension Plan, Local 73
,
Although the district court correctly rejected the bankruptcy court’s rationale for denying the
Class 4 creditors’ request for attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses, we ultimately disagree with the
reasoning of both courts, because neither
In re Martin
nor
CPT Holding
governs our decision.
In
re Martin
is a case concerning a dischargeability action against the debtor, as opposed to a claim
against the general assets of the estate, and as such, involves an entirely different set of policy
considerations.
See In re Sakowitz
,
Despite the fact that
CPT Holdings
does not limit the Class 4 creditor’s recovery of attorneys’
fees, costs, and expenses, Dow Corning argues that we should follow the line of cases that limit a
creditor’s recovery of attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses to those incurred while litigating the
validity of the contract.
See Renfrow v. Draper
, 232 F.3d 688, 694 (9th Cir. 2000) (awarding
attorneys’ fees in bankruptcy incurred while litigating the validity and terms of a divorce decree);
In re Fobian
,
In
Vanston Bondholders Protective Committee v. Green
,
Following
Vanston
, we conclude that the extent of the Class 4 creditors recovery will be
governed by state law. Other Sixth Circuit cases have reached results consistent with our decision
today in other bankruptcy contexts
. See Martin
,
In so holding, we decline to follow the series of Ninth Circuit cases relied upon by Dow, which
limit the recovery of attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses to those incurred in enforcing the contract.
Significantly, in several of those cases, the contract itself only provided for the recovery of
attorneys’ fees in that specific context.
[3]
See Renfrow
,
We do not find the reasoning of
Thrifty Oil
persuasive. In reaching its conclusion, the Ninth
Circuit considered
In re Baroff
, in which that court determined that California law limits the
recovery of attorneys’ fees to “any action on a contract.”
In this circuit, an unsecured creditor may recover those costs to which it has a state-law-based right against a solvent debtor, regardless of the nature of the federal proceedings. State law may, of course, require an examination of the nature of the proceedings in federal court, but absent such state law concerns, the federal law of this circuit does not limit contractual awards of attorneys’ fees to situations where the issue of contract enforceability was litigated in bankruptcy court. [4] Although arguably in tension with the Ninth Circuit, our decision is consistent with that of other courts that have awarded attorneys’ fees to which a party was contractually entitled, despite the fact that the litigation did not involve enforcement of the contract itself. See TransSouth Fin. Corp. of Florida v. Johnson , 931 F.2d 1505, 1506-07 (11th Cir. 1991) (allowing a creditor successful in dischargeability proceedings to recover contractual attorneys’ fees); United Merch. & Mfrs. , 674 F.2d at 139 (rejecting bankruptcy court’s decision limiting creditor’s recovery of collection costs to those incurred for services outside bankruptcy proceedings).
In the instant case, none of the applicable state law is before us, nor has any party or any court yet undertaken a detailed examination of the contracts at issue. Thus, we reverse the district court’s determination that attorneys’ fees, costs, and expenses are never allowable unless they relate to litigation of the validity of contracts under state law, and remand this case to the district court, with instructions to remand it to the bankruptcy court, for proper consideration of exactly what fee arrangements are permitted under the relevant state laws and under each contract at issue. It may well be that the relevant laws do indeed, like the California law at issue in Baroff , only permit fees related to contract enforcement as opposed to those incurred in any type of debt collection action, but this is simply not clear on the record before us.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we hereby REVERSE the decision of the district court, REMAND the case to the district court, and instruct that the district court remand this matter to the bankruptcy court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
[*] The Honorable Thomas A. Wiseman, United States District Judge for the Middle District of Tennessee, sitting by designation. 1
[1] On April 20, 2005, the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act, Pub. L. No. 109-8, 119 Stat. 23 (BAPCPA), was signed into law. Because Dow Corning’s bankruptcy petition was filed before April 20, 2005, amendments to the Bankruptcy Code, and all citations to, or quotations of, specific code provisions shall refer to the Code (or particular sections of the Code) prior to its amendment by BAPCPA–i.e., 11 U.S.C. §§ 101–1330 (2000).
[2] Appellant Bank of New York (“BNY”) has filed briefs in this case separate from those of the other Class 4 creditors, primarily because BNY’s debt contracts did not includе a default rate or variable interest rates, and thus they are not disputing the lower courts’ decisions with respect to those issues. Nonetheless, with regard to the issue of fees and costs, the majority of its arguments are effectively the same as those of the remaining creditors (all of whom filed one consolidated brief), and thus we will treat all of these arguments together, noting BNY’s one separate argument at the end of the costs section.
[3]
Dow Corning cites
In re Sokolowksi
,
[4] Bankruptcy courts remain free, of course, to limit recovery to those attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses which are reasonable under the circumstances.
