NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
In re
MTC TELEMANAGEMENT CORP., et al., No. 97-12893
Debtor(s).
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Memorandum on Arbitration Award as Administrative Expense Claim
I. Introduction
On January 23, 1996, debtor MTC Telemanagement Corporation entered into a joint venture
agreement with claimants Henk Keilman and Jan Peter Kastelein to develop and sell telecommunications
service in Europe. On April 7, 1997, Keilman and Kastelein gave a notice pursuant to the agreement
rescinding and terminating it. On August 1, 1997, involuntary bankruptcy petitions were filed against
MTC and its affiliates. John H. Brownell was appointed Chapter 11 trustee.
There were no unencumbered assets in the bankruptcy estate. However, the principal secured
creditors believed that the notice given by Keilman and Kastelein was ineffective and that MTC had a
valuable claim against them. They accordingly agreed to allow their collateral to be used by the trustee
to pay administrative expenses. On April 20, 1998, Brownell commenced arbitration proceedings
against Keilman and Kastelein.
While the arbitration was pending, the bankruptcy case was converted to Chapter 7 and Jeffry
Locke became trustee. Soon thereafter, the three principal secured creditors entered into a further
agreement with Locke allowing him to use their cash collateral to pay Chapter 7 administrative
expenses. Locke continued to prosecute the claims against Keilman and Kastelein.
The result of the arbitration was a complete loss for the bankruptcy estate. The arbitrator found
that MTC's claims were meritless. He awarded Keilman and Kastelein over $1 million in costs and
attorneys' fees and added $500,000.00 in sanctions for discovery abuses, commencing and maintaining
the arbitration without inquiring into the merits of the claim, and prolonging the proceedings
unnecessarily. Keilman and Kastelein have moved the court for allowance of their award as an
administrative expense. Locke objects.
II. Issues
The court sees two issues arising out of this dispute. The first is whether, as a general rule, a
postpetition litigation award based on a prepetition contract can be entitled to administrative priority.
Assuming that the answer to this question is no, the second issue is whether any special circumstances
in this case create an exception to the general rule.
III. Litigation Award as Entitled to Priority
In this circuit, the law has changed twice as to the allowability of postpetition litigation costs as
an administrative expense. Before there was a ruling from an appellate court in this circuit, most
bankruptcy courts followed
In re Hemingway Transport, Inc., 954 F.2d 1, 5 (1st Cir.1992), which held
that postpetition litigation expenses based on a prepetition contract are not entitled to administrative
priority.
The decision of the appellate panel in In re Madden, 185 B.R. 815 (9th Cir.BAP 1995), changed
the law in this circuit. Basing its decision on Reading Co. v. Brown, 391 U.S. 471, 88 S.Ct. 1759, 20
L.Ed.2d 751 (1968), the appellate panel granted priority status to postpetition litigation costs.
However, the Ninth Circuit changed the law again in In re Abercrombie, 139 F.3d 755 (9th Cir. 1998).
In that decision, the court expressly approved Hemingway Transport and disapproved Madden. 139
F.3d at 759. Ninth Circuit in Hemmingway read Reading much more narrowly as applying only to
postpetition torts committed while the estate operated a business, not contractual expenses while the
estate is being liquidated. 139 F.3d at 758-59. Pursuant to Abercrombie, the law in this circuit is that
"costs and expenses arising out of prepetition contracts are treated under the Bankruptcy Code as
nonprioritized unsecured claims." 139 F.3d at 757.
IV. Equitable Exceptions
In most cases, it makes no sense to give a creditor a huge windfall just because its claim was
adjudicated postpetition. There was no requirement in the agreement between MTC and Keilman and
Kastelein that MTC demonstrate any financial strength before commencing arbitration. Had the
arbitration been concluded before the bankruptcy, the award would have been uncollectible. If the court
were to adopt the claimants' reasoning, then the bankruptcy was the best thing that could ever happen
to them. Bankruptcy cases are not supposed to create windfalls.
In most cases, the granting of administrative priority means that one creditor is paid from funds
which would otherwise go to other innocent creditors. Where a contractual obligation was created
prepetition, along with a lot of other debt, it is difficult to articulate a reason why most creditors should
receive less so that one creditor can be paid in full just because that creditor's claim was liquidated after
bankruptcy.
However, this case is unusual for two reasons. First, there are no innocent creditors. The only
assets in the estate are the secured creditors' funds which they agreed could be used to fund the
arbitration and will not filter down to any creditors even if the request for priority status is denied.
Second, there is an express finding by the arbitrator that the estate representative was guilty of
discovery abuses, commencing and maintaining the arbitration without inquiring into the merits of the
claim, and prolonging the proceedings unnecessarily. Allowance of some sort of administrative
expense claim would, in this rare case, result in financial harm only to responsible parties and not
innocent ones. (1)
Abercrombie held that the postpetition prosecution of a dispute involving a prepetition contract
does not create a prepetition debt. 139 F.3d at 758-59, citing Hemingway. The court in Hemingway
specifically declined to rule that a Reading administrative expense claim may never be allowed in a
Chapter 7 liquidation, although such allowance would not be permitted if fundamentally unfair. 954
F.2d at 6.
After considerable reflection, the court reaches the conclusion that this is one of those very rare
cases where the equities permit the allowance of an administrative expense claim for postpetition
litigation costs over a prepetition contract. Under the unique circumstances of this case, allowance can
be made without harming innocent third parties and is appropriate in order to make the estate
representatives and their counsel responsible for their wrongful conduct.
V. Conclusion
The arbitrator made it clear that the sum of $500,000.00 was necessary to compensate Keilman
and Kastelein for the wrongful acts of estate representatives. Accordingly, the court will allow an
administrative claim in this amount. The trustee's objection to the administrative expense claim will be
sustained as to all amounts over $500,000.00.
Before a final order can be entered, the court needs to allocate the allowed administrative
expense claim between Chapter 11 and Chapter 7. The court will hold a status conference on October
29, 2001, at 2:00 P.M., in order to set an evidentiary hearing on this issue.
Dated: September 10, 2001 ___________________________
Alan Jaroslovsky
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge
1. Keilman and Kastelein seem to make the argument that because the secured creditors agreed to
allow their cash collateral to be used for administrative expenses, those creditors must pay that portion
of the award granted administrative status. The court doubts this result, as an incidental third-party
beneficiary of an agreement usually cannot recover more than was contemplated by the parties to the
agreement. In any event, this issue is not before the court and the secured creditors have not been given
sufficient notice to make any rulings binding on