The federal Bankruptcy Code (“Code”), 11 U.S.C. §§ 101
et seq.,
does not explicitly state whether an unsecured creditor can collect posi-petition attorneys’ fees based on a pre-petition indemnity agreement. In
United Merchants & Manufacturers, Inc. v. Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States,
Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland (“Fidelity”) entered into several agreements (“the Agreements”) with Ag-way, Inc. which required Agway to indemnify Fidelity for attorneys’ fees that it might incur to enforce the Agreements against Agway. After Agway filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 11, Fidelity duly made payments to Agway’s creditors, unsuccessfully demanded indemnity under the Agreements, and incurred attorneys’ fees in litigation to collect from Agway. Only those attorneys’ fees are at issue on this appeal. The liquidating trustee of the Agway Liquidating Trust (“the Trust”), D. Clark Ogle (“Ogle”), concedes that Fidelity has a right to the fees under state contract law, but refuses to pay on the ground that the Code bars such recovery.
The United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of New York (Ger-ling, C.J.) held that Fidelity can collect $884,506.28 in post-petition attorneys’ fees. The United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Sharpe, J.) affirmed. Ogle appeals that decision. We affirm, concluding that the Code does not prohibit an unsecured creditor from collecting post-petition attorneys’ fees pursuant to an otherwise enforceable pre-petition contract of indemnity.
I
Pursuant to the Agreements, Fidelity provided surety bonds (“Bonds”) to Ag-way’s insurers, and Agway in turn agreed to indemnify Fidelity for any payments that it made under the Bonds as well as legal fees incurred to enforce the Agreements. On October 1, 2002, Agway filed a voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition. Up until then, Agway had not defaulted on any payment obligation to its insurers; Fidelity’s claim in bankruptcy therefore asserted no more than a contingent right to payment under the Agreements.
When Agway thereafter defaulted on payments to its insurers, the insurers in turn sought payment from Fidelity, and Fidelity tendered payment consistent with its obligations under the Bonds. Fidelity incurred additional costs, including legal fees, enforcing its indemnity rights against Agway in prolonged litigation. On July 18, 2008, the Bankruptcy Court concluded (as relevant here) that Agway was liable for Fidelity’s post-petition attorneys’ fees.
The parties thereafter settled all of the issues between them except the order requiring payment of post-petition attorneys’ fees. Ogle appealed that part of the bankruptcy court’s order to the district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a), and the district court affirmed the bankruptcy court’s order. Ogle now appeals to this Court.
The sole question on appeal is one of law: Under the Bankruptcy Code, is an unsecured creditor entitled to recover post-petition attorneys’ fees that were authorized by a pre-petition contract but were contingent on post-petition events?
Where, as here, a district court affirms a bankruptcy court’s decision, we independently review the decision of the bankruptcy court.
Adelphia Bus. Solutions, Inc. v. Abnos,
II
Courts are closely divided on the question presented. One line of cases holds that an unsecured claim for post-petition attorneys’ fees asserted on the basis of a prepetition contract is allowable.
See, e.g., In re SNTL Corp.,
This Court allowed such claims in a case that was decided under the former Bankruptcy Act, but that commented on section 506(b) of the Code.
United Merchs. & Mfrs., Inc. v. Equitable Life Assurance Soc’y of the U.S.,
Ill
Two Code provisions bear upon the disputed question: section 502(b) and section 506(b). Travelers addresses the first, and United Merchants the second.
A
Section 502(b) of the Code provides (with inapplicable exceptions) that a “court, after notice and a hearing, shall determine the
amount
of [a] claim in lawful currency of the United States
as of the date of the filing of the petition,
and shall allow such claim in such amount.” 11 U.S.C. § 502(b) (emphases added). A claim, in turn, is a “right to payment, whether or not such right is reduced to judgment, liquidated,
unliquidated,
fixed,
contingent,
matured,
unmatured,
disputed, undisputed, legal, equitable, secured, or
unsecured.”
11 U.S.C. § 101(5)(A) (emphases added). A “right to payment ... usually refer[s] to a right to payment recognized under state law.”
Travelers,
A “contingent” claim under the Code refers “to obligations that will become due upon the happening of a future event that was within the actual or presumed contemplation of the parties at the time the original relationship between the parties was created.”
In re Manville Forest Prods. Corp.,
Manville therefore makes clear that Fidelity possessed a contingent right to post-petition attorneys’ fees, and that its right arose pre-petition. However, the dollar amount of Fidelity’s contingent right was not a sum certain on the day the bankruptcy petition was filed. We read Travelers to mean that this does not matter.
The Supreme Court framed the
Travelers
issue as follows: “We are asked to consider whether federal bankruptcy law precludes an unsecured creditor from recovering attorney’s fees authorized by a prepetition contract and incurred in post-petition litigation.”
This is important because, under
Travelers,
section 502(b) interposes no bar to an unsecured creditor’s ability to recover post-petition attorneys’ fees.
Travelers
starts from the premise that “an otherwise enforceable contract allocating attorney’s fees (ie., one that is enforceable under substantive, nonbankruptcy law) is allowable in bankruptcy except where the Bankruptcy Code provides otherwise.”
Id.
at 448,
Section 502(b)(1) in turn bars any claim that “is unenforceable against the debtor and property of the debtor, under any agreement or applicable law for a reason other than because such claim is contingent or unmatured.” 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(1).
Travelers
construed this wording to mean that “any defense to a claim that is available outside of the bankruptcy context is also available in bankruptcy.”
All of the fees at issue in Travelers were incurred post-petition; so the amount was necessarily unknown when the bankruptcy petition was filed. It follows that if an unsecured claim for post-petition fees was for that reason unrecoverable, the Travelers Court could have disposed of the claim on that simple, available ground alone. Travelers, therefore, proceeds along lines that, reasonably extended, would suggest (notwithstanding the Court’s express disclaimer) that section 502(b)’s requirement — that the court “shall determine the amount of such claim ... as of the date of the filing of the petition” — does not bar recovery of post-petition attorneys’ fees.
In the present appeal, as in
Travelers:
The underlying contract is valid as a matter of state substantive law; none of the section 502(b)(2)-(9) exceptions apply; and the Code is silent as to the particular question presented — in
Travelers,
whether the Code allows “unsecured claims for contractual attorney’s fees incurred while litigating issues of bankruptcy law,”
Accordingly, we hold that an unsecured claim for post-petition fees, authorized by a valid pre-petition contract, is allowable under section 502(b) and is deemed to have arisen pre-petition.
Accord SNTL,
B
“[Cjlaims enforceable under applicable state law will be allowed in bankruptcy unless they are expressly disallowed.”
Travelers,
In
United Merchants,
we observed: “Neither [section 506(b) ] nor its legislative history sheds any light on the status of an unsecured creditor’s contractual claims for attorney’s fees.”
As
Travelers
makes clear, the question is whether the Code
disallows
post-petition attorneys’ fees, and does so expressly. It was therefore decisive in
Travelers
that “the Code says
nothing
about unsecured claims for contractual attorney’s fees incurred while litigating issues of bankruptcy law.”
Accordingly, we hold that section 506(b) does not implicate unsecured claims for post-petition attorneys’ fees, and it therefore interposes no bar to recovery.
IV
Ogle adduces three additional reasons for construing the Code to disallow unsecured claims for post-petition attorneys’ fees.
Ogle relies on wording in
United Savings Association of Texas v. Timbers of Inwood Forest Associates, Ltd.,
Ogle argues that an unsecured claim for post-petition attorneys’ fees is barred by section 502(e)(2), which provides that a claim for “reimbursement or contribution ... that becomes fixed after the commencement of the case ... shall be allowed ... the same as if such claim had become fixed before the date of the filing of the petition.” 11 U.S.C. § 502(e)(2). Ogle’s argument relies on
ex-pressio unius:
Because section 502(e)(2) provides an exception to section 502(b) for reimbursement and contribution, it thereby forecloses an exception for post-petition attorneys’ fees. However,
Travelers
requires us to “presume that claims enforceable under applicable state law will be allowed in bankruptcy unless they are expressly disallowed.”
Ogle argues from policy that allowing an unsecured creditor to collect post-petition attorneys’ fees based on a pre-petition contract would unfairly disadvantage other creditors (such as tort claimants and trade creditors) whose distributions would be reduced pro tanto. In United Merchants, however, we rejected the idea “that the policy of equitable distribution” defeats “an unsecured creditor’s otherwise valid contractual claim for collection costs
When equally sophisticated parties negotiate a loan agreement that provides for recovery of collection costs upon default, courts should presume, absent a clear showing to the contrary, that the creditor gave value, in the form of a contract term favorable to the debtor or otherwise, in exchange for the collection costs provision. Such a creditor should recover more in the division of the debt- or’s estate because it gave more to the debtor at the time it made the loan. Rather than providing an undeserved bonus for one creditor at the expense of others, allowing a claim under a collection costs provision merely effectuates the bargained-for terms of the loan contract.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
