RADLAX GATEWAY HOTEL, LLC, ET AL. v. AMALGAMATED BANK
No. 11-166
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued April 23, 2012—Decided May 29, 2012
566 U.S. 639
David M. Neff argued the cause for petitioners. With him on the briefs were Brian A. Audette and Eric E. Walker.
Deanne E. Maynard argued the cause for respondent. With her on the brief were Brian R. Matsui, Marc A. Hearron, Adam A. Lewis, and Norman S. Rosenbaum.
Sarаh E. Harrington argued the cause for the United States as amicus curiae urging affirmance. With her on the brief were Solicitor General Verrilli, Assistant Attorney General West, Deputy Solicitor General Stewart, and Robert M. Loeb.*
*Briefs of amici curiae urging affirmance were filed for Bankruptcy Scholars by Adam K. Mortara; for the Loan Syndications and Trading Association et al. by Seth P. Wаxman, Craig Goldblatt, Danielle Spinelli, Eric F. Citron, Elliot Ganz, Jonathan N. Helfat, Daniel Wallen, Richard M. Kohn, Jeffrey R. Fine, Christopher D. Kratovil, and Scott Sinder; for Richard Aaron et al. by Richard Lieb; and for G. Eric Brunstad, Jr., by Mr. Brunstad, pro se, Collin O‘Connor Udell, and Matthew J. Delude.
We consider whether a Chapter 11 bankruptcy plan may be confirmed over the objection of a secured creditor pursuant to
I
In 2007, petitioners RadLAX Gateway Hotel, LLC, and RadLAX Gateway Deck, LLC (hereinafter debtors), purchased the Radisson Hotel at Los Angeles International Airport, together with an adjacent lot on which the debtors planned to build a parking structure. To finance the purchase, the renovation of the hotel, and construction of the parking structure, the debtors obtained a $142 million loan from Longview Ultra Construction Loan Investment Fund, for which respondent Amalgamated Bank (hereinafter creditor or Bank) serves as trustee. The lenders obtained a blanket lien on all of thе debtors’ assets to secure the loan.
Completing the parking structure proved more expensive than anticipated, and within two years the debtors had run out of funds and were forced to halt construction. By August 2009, they owed more than $120 million on the loan, with over $1 million in interest accruing every month and no prospect for obtaining additional funds to complete the project. Both debtors filed voluntary petitions for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code.
A Chapter 11 bankruptcy is implemented according to a “plan,” typically proposed by the debtor, which divides claims against the debtor into separate “classes” and specifies the treatment each class will receive. See
In 2010, the RadLAX debtors submitted a Chapter 11 plan to the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Illinois. The plan proposed to dissolve the debtors and to sell substantially all of their assets pursuant to procedures set out in a contemporaneously filed “Sale and Bid Procedures Motion.” Specifically, the debtors sought to auction their assets to the highest bidder, with the initial bid submitted by a “stalking horse“—a potential purchaser who was willing to make an advance bid of $47.5 million.1 The sale proceeds would be used to fund the plan, primarily by repaying the Bank. Of course the Bank itself might wish to obtain the property if the alternative would be receiving auction proceeds that fall short of the property‘s full value. Under the debtors’ proposed auction procedures, however, the Bank would not be permitted to bid for the property using the debt it is owed to offset the purchase price, a practice known as “credit-bidding.” Instead, the Bank would be forced to bid cash. Correctly anticipating that the Bank would object to this arrangement, the debtors sought to confirm their plan under the cramdown provisions of
The Bankruptcy Court denied the debtors’ Sale and Bid Procedures Motion, concluding that the proposed auction procedures did not comply with
II
A
A Chapter 11 plan confirmed over the objection of a “class of secured claims” must meet one of three requirements in order to be deemed “fair and equitable” with respect to the nonconsenting creditor‘s claim. The plan must provide:
“(i)(I) that the holders of such claims retain the liens securing such claims, whether the property subject to such liens is retained by the debtor or transferred to another entity, to the extent of the allowed amount of such claims; and (II) that each holder of a claim of such class receive on account of such claim deferred cash payments totaling at least the allowed аmount of such claim, of a value, as of the effective date of the plan, of at least the value of such holder‘s interest in the estate‘s interest in such property;
“(ii) for the sale, subject to section 363(k) of this title, of any property that is subject to the liens securing such claims, free and clear of such liens, with such liens to attach to the proceeds of such sale, and the treatment of such liens on proceeds under clause (i) or (iii) of this subparagraph; or
“(iii) for the realization by such holders of the indubitable equivalent of such claims.”
11 U. S. C. §1129(b)(2)(A) .
Under clause (i), the secured creditor retains its lien on the property and receives deferred cash payments. Under
The debtors in this case have proposed to sell their property free and clear of the Bank‘s liens, and to repay the Bank using the sale proceeds—precisely, it would seem, the disposition contemplated by clause (ii). Yet since the debtors’ proposed auction procedures do not permit the Bank to credit-bid, the proposed sale cannot satisfy the requirements of clause (ii).3 Recognizing this problem, the debtors instead seek plan confirmation pursuant to clause (iii), which—unlike clause (ii)—does not expressly foreclose the possibility of a sale without credit-bidding. According to the debtors, their plan can satisfy clause (iii) by ultimately providing the Bank with the “indubitable equivalent” of its secured claim, in the form of cash generated by the auction.
The general/specific canon is perhaps most frequently applied to statutes in which a general permission or prohibition is contradicted by a specific prohibition or permission. To eliminate the contradiction, the specific provision is construed as an exception to the general one. See, e. g., Morton v. Mancari, 417 U. S. 535, 550-551 (1974). But the canon has full application as well to statutes such as the one here, in which a general authorization and a more limited, specific authorization exist side by side. There the canon avoids not contradiction but the superfluity of a specific provision that is swallowed by the general one, “violat[ing] the cardinal rule that, if possible, effect shall be given to every clause and part of a statute.” D. Ginsberg & Sons, Inc. v. Popkin, 285 U. S. 204, 208 (1932). The terms of the specific authorization must be complied with. For example, in the last cited case a provision of the Bankruptcy Act prescribed in great detail the procedures governing the arrest and dеtention of bankrupts about to leave the district in order to avoid examination. The Court held that those prescriptions could not be avoided by relying upon a general provision of the Act au-
“It is an old and familiar rule that, where there is, in the same statute, a particular enactment, and also a gеneral one, which, in its most comprehensive sense, would include what is embraced in the former, the particular enactment must be operative, and the general enactment must be taken to affect only such cases within its general language as are not within the provisions of the particular enactment. This rule applies wherever an act contains gеneral provisions and also special ones upon a subject, which, standing alone, the general provisions would include.” United States v. Chase, 135 U. S. 255, 260 (1890) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
Here, clause (ii) is a detailed provision that spells out the requirements for selling collateral free of liens, while clause (iii) is a broadly worded provision that says nothing about such a sale. The general/specific canon explаins that the “general language” of clause (iii), “although broad enough to include it, will not be held to apply to a matter specifically dealt with” in clause (ii). D. Ginsberg & Sons, Inc., supra, at 208.
Of course the general/specific canon is not an absolute rule, but is merely a strong indication of statutory meaning that can be overcome by textual indications that point in the
B
None of the debtors’ objections to this approach is valid. The debtors’ principal textual argument is that
The debtors make several arguments against applying the general/specific canon. They contend that clause (ii) is no more specific than clause (iii), because the former provides a procedural protection to secured creditors (credit-bidding) whilе the latter provides a substantive protection (indubitable equivalence). As a result, they say, clause (ii) is not “a limiting subset” of clause (iii), which (according to their view) application of the general/specific canon requires. Brief for Petitioners 30-31; Reply Brief for Petitioners 5-6. To begin with, we know of no authority for the proposition that the canon is confined to situаtions in which the entirety of the specific provision is a “subset” of the general one. When the conduct at issue falls within the scope of both provisions, the specific presumptively governs, whether or not the specific provision also applies to some conduct that falls outside the general. In any case, we think clause (ii) is entirely a subset. Clause (iii) applies to all cramdown plans, which include all of the plans within the more narrow category described in clause (ii).4 That its requirements are “substantive” whereas clause (ii)‘s are “procedural” is quite beside the point. What counts for application of the general/specific canon is not the nature of the provisions’ prescriptions but their scopе.
Finally, the debtors contend that the Court of Appeals conflated approval of bid procedures with plan confirmation. Brief for Petitioners 39. They claim the right to pursue their auction now, leaving it for the Bankruptcy Judge to determine, at the confirmation stage, whether the resulting
III
The parties debate at somе length the purposes of the Bankruptcy Code, pre-Code practices, and the merits of credit-bidding. To varying extents, some of those debates also occupied the attention of the Courts of Appeals that considered the question presented here. See, e. g., In re Philadelphia Newspapers, LLC, 599 F. 3d 298, 314-317 (CA3 2010); id., at 331-337 (Ambro, J., dissenting). But nothing in the generalized statutory purpose of protecting secured creditors can overcome the specific manner of that protection which the text of
The Bankruptcy Code standardizes an expansive (and sometimes unruly) area of law, and it is our obligation to interpret the Code clearly and predictably using well established principles of statutory construction. See United States v. Ron Pair Enterprises, Inc., 489 U. S. 235, 240-241 (1989). Under that approach, this is an easy case. Because the RadLAX debtors may not obtain confirmation of a Chapter 11 cramdown plan that provides for the sale of collateral free and clear of the Bank‘s lien, but does not permit the Bank to credit-bid at the sale, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
It is so ordered.
JUSTICE KENNEDY took no part in the decision of this case.
