ORDER
Background
This present motion to dismiss was filed by defendant/debtor Nevada Emergency Services, Inc., dba Medic I (NES) on 14 December 1983 and argued before the Court on 11 January 1984. NES, joined in its motion by non-debtor defendants International Life Support Inc. (ILS) and Jack Gould, seeks dismissal of this adversary proceeding for the plaintiffs’ alleged failure to prosecute their complaint, pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 7041 (which incorporates Fed.R.Civ.P. 41). NES filed its Chapter 11 petition on 14 September 1981 and became a reorganized debtor following the confirmation of its plan of reorganization on 21 December 1982.
The subject complaint was originally filed on 3 January 1983 in the Second Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada and removed to this Court by the defendant/debtor on 18 January 1983. The complaint alleges nine claims for relief against the defendants, including a postpet-ition breach of an oral contract formed prepetition; general, special, and punitive damages for postpetition slander per se (statements injurious to the plaintiffs’ business); damages for the conversion of money payable to the plaintiffs (date of the conversion unspecified); damages for breach of a duty of good faith and fair dealing in the business relationship with the plaintiffs (breach date unspecified); damages for fraud or negligence (dates unspecified); and damages for the intentional infliction of emotional distress (dates of tort unspecified).
Although some of the above claims are based on an alleged oral executory contract (which the debtor denies ever existed), neither the debtor’s plan nor the order confirming it made any mention of the assumption or rejection of executory contracts. Moreover, the plaintiffs were not listed on the debtor’s statement of financial affairs or on the schedules, and did not file a proof of claim. The plaintiffs assert that their lack of participation in the debtor’s ease was the result of the debtor’s failure to notify them of the filing and provide notice in due course with the other creditors of the crucial dates (e.g., deadline for filing proof of claim, for objecting to the debtor’s disclosure statement and plan). Plaintiffs further allege that they first learned of this Chapter 11 case when the debtor removed this proceeding to the Bankruptcy Court.
Following the debtor’s removal the non-debtor defendants filed a motion for remand to have the proceeding returned to the state court for trial, alleging this Court’s lack of subject matter jurisdiction over themselves. The Court entertained arguments on this motion on 30 June 1983 and postponed further consideration to allow the parties additional time to frame the pertinent issues. This remand motion was to have been reset by counsel, but to date has not.
After due consideration of the defendants’ arguments at the 11 January 1984
Discussion
If the plaintiffs’ claims are barred by operation of this Court’s 21 December 1982 order confirming the debtor’s plan of reorganization then, of course, dismissal of the complaint as against the debtor is warranted. This is the alternative ground suggested by the Court. 1 Dismissing the debtor out of the action might also remove the Court’s jurisdictional basis for this proceeding, thereby requiring remand to the state court for the adjudication of the plaintiffs’ claims against ILS and Gould. 2
The confirmation of a reorganization plan has some far-reaching effects on the rights of those asserting claims against the estate. All creditors, whether impaired or whether they have accepted the plan, are bound by the plan’s provisions. 11 U.S.C. § 1141(a). All property of the estate, except as otherwise provided in the plan or confirmation order, is vested in the debtor, § 1141(b), and is “free and clear of all claims and interests of creditors.” § 1141(c). Perhaps most importantly, the confirmation of the plan discharges the debtor from “any debt that arose before the date of such confirmation,” (and certain debts that are deemed to have arisen before the date of the filing of the petition, such as those arising from the rejection of executory contracts) whether or not a proof of claim has been filed or the plan accepted by the creditor. § 1141(d). This Chapter 11 discharge also includes certain statutory exceptions inapplicable here; however, there is a constitutional exception or limitation on the § 1141(d) discharge that may be applicable.
Based upon a United States Supreme Court case decided under former law,
New York v. N.Y., N.H. & H.R. Co.,
Nor can the bar order against New York be sustained because of the city’s knowledge that reorganization of the railroad was taking place in the court. The argument is that such knowledge puts a duty on creditors to inquire for themselves about possible court orders limiting the time for filing claims. But even creditors who have knowledge of a reorganization have a right to assume that the statutory “reasonable notice” will be given them before their claims are forever barred.
Similarly, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, in a decision that concerned a reorganization filing under Chapter X of the former Bankruptcy Act, held that notice by publication to creditors of the proceeding’s crucial bar dates was insufficient given the trustee’s actual knowledge of the creditor and its claim.
In re Harbor Tank Storage Co.,
the failure of the Trustee, knowing of the creditor’s claim, to mail the various notiees required by Chapter X, precludes a finding that the Creditor is barred by confirmation of the reorganization plan from presenting his claim to the bankruptcy court. Mere notice by publication, though, of necessity, sufficient where a creditor is either unknown or of uncertain identity, ... cannot be considered adequate under the circumstances here presented. The importance of active creditor participation in reorganization proceedings, which Chapter X explicitly encourages, ... coupled with the practical dangers to substantive creditor rights posed by the lack of such participation, will admit of no other conclusion.
(Emphasis added, footnote omitted). In a recent bankruptcy court case addressing a similar question,
In re American Properties, Inc.,
Obviously the facts of the cases above differ in important respects from those alleged
3
in the present case. The principal difference being that the debtor denies any knowledge of the plaintiffs’ status as a claimant.
4
However, the principles
The question then naturally arises as to what constitutes a reasonable opportunity to be heard if the claimant and the existence of the claim are unknown to the debt- or.
5
Without answering the question, this Court only notes the references (mostly dicta) to unknown claimants in the previously cited cases. In
New York
the Supreme Court recognized the occasional necessity and obvious limitations of publication notice: “Notice by publication is a poor and sometimes hopeless substitute for actual service of notice. Its justification is difficult at best ... But when the names, interests and addresses of persons are unknown, plain necessity may cause a resort to publication.”
This Court has not hesitated to approve of resort to publication as a customary substitute in another class of cases where it is not reasonably possible or practicable to give more adequate warning. Thus it has been recognized that, in the case of persons missing or unknown, employment of an indirect and even probably futile means of notification is all that the situation permits and creates no constitutional bar to a final decree foreclosing their rights.
Conclusion
In the absence of evidence, the Court offers no opinion respecting the merit of plaintiffs’ claims, but only decides that the debtor/movant has not shown that the plaintiffs have had a reasonable opportunity to be heard. Without such a showing the Court cannot, consistent with due process, conclude that the claims are discharged nor grant the motion to dismiss. Accordingly it is hereby
ORDERED that the debtor’s motion to dismiss is denied.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the parties set this complaint for trial at the earliest date practicable.
Notes
. A related question proposed at the 11 January 1984 hearing concerns the legal vitality of an executory contract neither assumed nor rejected by the debtor before confirmation of its plan. While this question is not answered by the Bankruptcy Code, case law developed under past and current law supports the conclusion that such contracts pass through the reorganization proceedings unaffected and become an obligation of the reorganized debtor.
Consolidated Gas Elec. L. & P. Co. v. United Railways & Elec. Co.,
. However, failure to dismiss all claims against the debtor would not necessarily require adjudication in the Bankruptcy Court. In a recent bankruptcy decision affirmed by the district court it was held that the state court was not deprived of jurisdiction by 28 U.S.C. § 1471(d) or the automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362 to adjudicate postconfirmation breaches of an ex-ecutory contract.
In re Paradise Valley Country Club,
. The "facts” outlined in this order have been presented to the Court by way of argument and the pleadings, not by sworn testimony or otherwise admissible evidence.
. The Court used the appellation "claimant” instead of a “creditor” advisedly to describe the position held by a party or parties such as the plaintiffs in this case. The subject complaint which describes the basis of the plaintiffs’ claims, does not expressly allege the commission of any tort or the breach of any duty by the debtor antedating the order for relief. The complaint does allege a postpetition breach of contract and postpetition slander. The dates of the remaining alleged actionable acts are unspecified. Therefore, as presently pleaded the complaint does not allege a “claim against the debtor that arose at the time of or before the order for relief," or a claim that is deemed to have arisen before the order for relief, which is
(A) right to payment, whether or not such right is reduced to judgment, liquidated, un-liquidated, fixed, contingent, matured, unma-tured, disputed, undisputed, legal, equitable, secured, or unsecured; or
(B) right to an equitable remedy for breach of performance if such breach gives rise to a right to payment, whether or not such right to an equitable remedy is reduced to judgment, fixed, contingent, matured, unmatured, disputed, undisputed, secured, or unsecured;
ll U.S.C. § 101(4).
This lack of creditor status is not a serious disability for the purposes of § 1141(d)(1)(A). That subsection “discharges the debtor from any debt that arose before the date of such confirmation.” The Code defines "debt” as “liability on a claim,” § 101(11); therefore, postpetition preconfirmation claims are discharged by operation of § 1141, assuming all of the other conditions for discharge have been met.
. For purposes of this discussion the Court assumes the debtor did not know and had no reason to know of the plaintiffs’ claims. If it did know or should have known the holdings of the New York case and its progeny would preclude a bar of the claims postconfirmation.
