OPINION OF THE COURT
This dispute arises out of the bankruptcy of Liberty Warehouse Associates Limited Partnership, which filed for reorganization under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (11 USC) in July 1996. Defendants are all limited partners, and defendant Mark J. Kronman is a managing partner of thе debtor’s general partner. At issue is whether an interest in the premises owned by the debtor, which sold at auction for $16,74-8,190, should instead have been conveyed to plaintiff at a contract price of $10,064,640.
In early 1997, the Ad Hoc Committee of Limited Partners was formed by defendant Kronman, which was authorized by defendant limited partners to act on their behalf. In November 1997, plaintiff Timberline Development L. L. C. entered into an agreement with the Committee to purchase an undivided 78.63% interest in the premises comprising the singlе asset of the limited partnership for the. sum of $9,042,450. The remaining 21.37% represents the interest to be held by a faction of the limited partners opposed to the liquidation. The sale price was calculated on a valuation of $11,500,000 for the entire premises. Section 6.2 of the purchase agreement expressly provides that should the Bankruptcy Court approve a higher and better offer for the property, the limited partnership, as seller, will pay a “Break Up Fee” of $250,000 plus the plaintiffs reasonable costs. The provision also recites, “Seller shall use reasonable efforts to obtain approval from the Bankruptcy Court of the private sale to Purchaser contemplated hereby.”
By order dated April- 8, 1998, the Bankruptcy Court (James L. Garrity, J.) directed a public sale, to be conducted on Aрril 30, 1998, which plaintiff appealed. At the conclusion of the auction held on that date, the Bankruptcy Court approved a bid of $20,300,000 for the property, including $16,748,190 for the interest subject to the purchase agreement. Motions seeking to stay the clоsing of the auction sale were denied by the Bankruptcy Court, the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York and the Second Circuit Court of Appeals.
Plaintiff Timberline thereupon commenced this action for breach of contract on May 27, 1998. The complaint charges that defendants breached the purchase agreement by urging the Bankruptcy Court to direct a public sale rather than approve the private sale to plaintiff. Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint on thе grounds of collateral estoppel and comity. Supreme Court granted the motion, holding that the issue of defendants’ breach has been decided by the Federal courts, thereby barring this action. In view of this disposition, the court did not reach the issue оf comity.
The parties’ arguments on appeal are directed to the estoppel issue. “Application of the doctrine of collateral estoppel requires ‘that an issue in the present proceeding be identical to thаt necessarily decided in a prior proceeding, and that in the prior proceeding the party against whom preclusion is sought was accorded a full and fair opportunity to contest the issue’ (Allied Chem. v Niagara Mohawk Power Corp.,
From the transcriрt of proceedings before the Bankruptcy Court contained in the record, it is clear that defendants’ liability to plaintiff was not decided and that the Bankruptcy Court was of the opinion that it lacked jurisdiction over the matter. It is also clear that defendants’ representatives alternately supported and opposed the private sale to plaintiff, leading the court to remark that for “the Ad Hoc Committee to say it flip-flopped on that is kind of an understatement.” However, to decide the limited question before it, the Bankruptcy Court necessarily decided that the purchase agreement was subject to higher and better offers and that sale to a higher bidder activated the breakup fee provision of the purchasе agreement. As attorneys for Timberline represented its interests before the Bankruptcy Court, plaintiff was afforded the opportunity to fully and fairly litigate this issue, and collateral estoppel bars its relitigation in State court.
The Bankruptcy Court’s finding that the sale is subject to competing bids pursuant to section 6.2 of the purchase agreement is not dispositive of the contract dispute, however. Two questions remain with respect to its construction. The first is whether the contractual provision requiring defendants to use “reasonable efforts” on behalf of the private sale is sufficiently definite to permit enforcement. The second concerns the effect of the breakup fee provision in which the reasonable efforts clause is сontained.
The requirement to employ reasonable efforts or “best efforts”, as it is generally expressed, in the performance of contractual obligations is deemed to be implicit in every agreement (Wood v Duff-Gordon,
It is axiomatic that the function of Bankruptcy Court is to maximize the estate in bankruptcy for the benefit of the debtor and its creditors (see, Matter of Harwald Co., 497 F2d 443, 444). Significantly, the proposed sale price under the purchase agreement was revised upward during the pendency of the bankruptcy proceedings when it was аnticipated that $13,000,000 would be offered for the property. Given the boom in the real estate market during the last few years, whether any amount of advocacy on behalf of the private sale would have been sufficient to induce the court tо approve the purchase agreement is, at best, surmise. Moreover, from the perspective of any court supervising the disposition of property (as in a mortgage foreclosure, for example), the prudent course is to cоnduct a public auction and require all interested persons to submit competitive bids. This Court will not speculate as to what circumstances might have induced the Bankruptcy Court to depart from standard practice and approve a private sale at a predetermined price. It is sufficient that, under the particular circumstances confronting it, the Bankruptcy Court did not regard the proposed sale to plaintiff as a sound exercise of its discretion.
In the abstract, the question оf the extent of the “reasonable effort” required from defendants to consummate the private sale is problematical. In the context of the entire provision, however, it presents a straightforward question of law. Section 6.2 of the purchase agreement expresses the condition that “if * * * the Bankruptcy Court determines that the sale pursuant to this Agreement shall be subject to higher and better offers * * * Seller shall obtain an order * * * which shall provide that if * * * the Bankruptcy Court approves a higher and better offer * * * Seller shall pay to Purchaser * * * $250,000.00 (the ‘Break Up Fee’), plus * * * reasonable costs not to exceed $50,000 * * * In such event, neither Seller nor Purchaser shall have any further obligation or liability to the other party hereunder * * *. Seller shаll use reasonable efforts to obtain approval from the Bankruptcy Court of the private sale to Purchaser contemplated hereby.” In ruling on plaintiff’s ap
As the Bankruptcy Court suggested, this clause provides for liquidated damages in the event the premises were оffered for sale at auction. To go forward with this action, plaintiff must show not only that defendants’ efforts to secure a private sale of the premises were not “reasonable” under some objective criteria but also that defendants’ default of this obligation removes it from the operation of the liquidated damages clause.
Plaintiff urges the Court to construe the reasonable efforts provision as an obligation distinct from and in addition to the liquidated damages clause. However, the рrovision, limiting plaintiff’s recovery to $250,000 plus expenses, contains no exception for the particular circumstances confronting the parties (cf., Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v Noble Lowndes Intl.,
Given the uncertainty regarding the criteria to be applied to the “rеasonable efforts” requirement and the explicit provision for liquidated damages in the event the Bankruptcy Court accepted a higher bid for the property, plaintiff is limited to the remedy provided in section 6.2 of the contract.
Accordingly, the judgment of the Supreme Court, New York County (Barry Cozier, J.), entered February 4, 1999, which dismissed plaintiff’s complaint on the ground of collateral estoppel, should be affirmed, with costs. The appeal from the order of the same court and Justice, enterеd January 26, 1999,
Rosenberger, J. P., Tom, Mazzarelli and Lerner, JJ., concur.
Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County, entered February 4, 1999, affirmed, with costs. Appeal from order, same court, entered January 26, 1999, dismissed, without costs, as subsumed in the appeal from the judgment.
