In re Madden

Decision Date22 August 1995
Docket NumberBAP No. NC-94-2154-VRH. BK. No. 93-47110 J.
Citation185 BR 815
PartiesIn re Joseph E. MADDEN, Debtor. IRMAS FAMILY TRUST, and Gloria and Peter S. Gold Revocable Intervivos Trust, Appellants, v. Joseph E. MADDEN, Appellee.
CourtU.S. Bankruptcy Appellate Panel, Ninth Circuit

Mark Shinderman, Los Angeles, CA, for appellants.

David M. Sternberg, Walnut Creek, CA, for appellee.

Before VOLINN, RUSSELL and HAGAN, Bankruptcy Judges.

OPINION

VOLINN, Bankruptcy Judge.

OVERVIEW

Prior to filing his chapter 11 petition, the debtor commenced a suit against defendants for breach of contract in a state court. After the filing, the debtor in possession voluntarily continued with the litigation. Ultimately, defendants prevailed and were awarded attorneys' fees pursuant to the contract. Defendants claimed administrative priority for the portion of fees incurred post-petition. The court denied priority because the fees did not constitute a benefit to the bankruptcy estate. We REVERSE.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW

In April 1993, the debtor, Joseph E. Madden, sued the Irmas Family Trust and the Gloria and Peter S. Gold Revocable Intervivos Trust (the Trusts), appellants herein, in state court. Madden's several causes of action in the state court suit arose from the Trusts' alleged breach of a real estate contract between the parties.

During the pendency of the suit, on October 7, 1993, Madden filed for protection under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code.1 Thereafter, the debtor, as debtor in possession, decided to continue with active prosecution of the state court suit. On February 14, 1994, the Trusts moved for summary judgment, which was granted by the state court, and, pursuant to an attorneys' fee clause in the subject contract,2 the court awarded them $87,000 in attorneys' fees. Of this amount, some $59,000 in fees and costs were found to have been incurred by the Trusts after the filing of Madden's bankruptcy petition.

The Trusts then filed a motion in the bankruptcy case to have this post-petition portion of their fee award granted administrative priority pursuant to § 503(b). The motion was denied by the court by order entered September 12, 1994, and this timely appeal followed.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

We review the bankruptcy court's award or denial of administrative priority for abuse of discretion. In re Hanna, 168 B.R. 386, 388 (9th Cir. BAP1994).

ISSUE PRESENTED

Whether the court abused its discretion by denying administrative priority to a liability for post-bankruptcy conduct incurred by the debtor in possession because 1) the liability did not arise from or yield a demonstrably commensurate benefit to the estate, and 2) the claim was based on rights arising from a prepetition contract with the debtor.

DISCUSSION

The Code authorizes the bankruptcy court to allow payment to certain parties ahead of the general creditors. Under § 503(b):

After notice and a hearing, there shall be allowed administrative expenses . . . including
(1)(A) the actual, necessary costs and expenses of preserving the estate, including wages, salaries, or commissions for services rendered after the commencement of the case. . . .

11 U.S.C. § 503 (emphasis added).3

Such allowed administrative expenses are entitled to first priority payment under § 507(a). As can be seen by the language of § 503(b), the allowance of administrative expenses is mandatory, not discretionary. The discretionary aspect of administrative allowance involves the determination by the court of whether a particular claim is an administrative expense. Beyond the language quoted above, the term "administrative expense" is not defined elsewhere in the Code.

The term "including" is not limiting. 11 U.S.C. § 102(3). By use of the term in the introductory language of § 503(b), the statute contemplates that the subsection (1) costs of preserving the estate (as well as those in subsections (2)-(6)) are not the only type of liability that may be charged against a bankruptcy estate. Thus, charges against the estate other than those related to its preservation are not necessarily excluded from qualifying as administrative expenses.

In the Ninth Circuit, the activities that can be considered to be of benefit to the estate are construed strictly. In In re Dant & Russell, 853 F.2d 700 (9th Cir.1988), the court stated, "The statute is explicit. Any claim for administrative expenses and costs must be the actual and necessary costs of preserving the estate for the benefit of its creditors." Id. at 706 (citing In re Baldwin-United Corp., 43 B.R. 443, 452 n. 12 (S.D.Ohio 1984)).4 The issue in that case involved a claim for administrative priority by the debtor's lessor for environmental cleanup costs on property which had been leased by the debtor. The lease was rejected by the debtor in possession shortly after bankruptcy pursuant to § 365(g). The debtor contended that the impacted property was not owned or operated by the bankruptcy estate and that any damages were of a prepetition nature allowable only as unsecured claims. The court held for the debtor, noting however, that a different result would have obtained had the impacted property been property of the estate. Id. at 709. See also In re Hanna, 168 B.R. 386 (9th Cir. BAP 1994).

While the construction indicated by Dant & Russell was strict as to the circumstances before it, that case and those following it do not indicate an inflexible approach. In the case of In re Palau Corp., 18 F.3d 746 (9th Cir.1994), administrative priority was denied for a backpay award which accrued post-petition to a wrongfully terminated employee, despite an injunction to rehire the employee. Denial was based on the fact that the employee had been terminated prepetition and that the backpay award did not relate to services actually rendered to the estate. Id. at 751. While the liability could arguably be said to have accrued from a post-petition failure to obey a mandate of the NLRB to rehire the employee, Palau's focus was on the liability, which had occurred prepetition; the post-petition enforcement of that liability could not be transformed into a post-petition obligation.

The foregoing cases do not address issues relating to post-petition activities or obligations of a bankruptcy estate. There are pertinent distinctions among the various activities carried on by such estates relating to entitlement to priority payment by the estate: 1) activities that serve to benefit the estate as specified in the language of the statute itself; and 2) activities that may create an independent obligation of the estate to others, without regard to whether there was benefit to the estate. See the discussion of this issue in In re Sierra Pacific Broadcasters, 185 B.R. 575 (9th Cir. BAP 1995), holding that a claim arising from a postpetition industrial accident and subsequent workers' compensation award should be given an administrative expense priority under § 503(b)(1).

Thus, where there is not only a lack of benefit but actual loss, the estate may nevertheless be held liable for an effort with a negative result. Where a chapter 11 business operates at a loss, those who serve it — payroll, suppliers, and administrative officers, including counsel — nevertheless are entitled to and commonly receive priority payment. It is not unusual that payment for these ultimately unproductive charges will result in exhaustion of the estate's remaining assets before anything is paid to those in the same or a lower order of priority — particularly general creditors.

An analysis based solely upon monetary benefit does not readily resolve other claims against the estate which are included in the larger realm implied by the statute. This broader area may be considered to encompass the cost of complying with a standard of behavior to which the estate must adhere as an entity which functions in the commercial world. As such, the estate cannot escape its liabilities by transmuting transactional costs and charges of functioning as an entity, postpetition, into unsecured claims of low or non-priority nature against the estate.

Dealing equitably with this situation requires assessment of administrative liability for post-petition conduct of a chapter 11 bankruptcy estate. Such an evaluation would comport with the analysis set forth in Reading Co. v. Brown, 391 U.S. 471, 88 S.Ct. 1759, 20 L.Ed.2d 751 (1968), which held that satisfaction of a tort liability incurred by the receiver during an arrangement proceeding would be granted administrative priority, since the liability arose within the scope of the receiver's authority. The liability was thus chargeable against the estate as an actual and necessary cost of administration.5 See also In re Charlesbank Laundry, Inc., 755 F.2d 200 (1st Cir.1985) (postpetition fine occasioned by chapter 11 debtor's disregard of injunction regarding zoning violation allowed administrative priority). In S.E.C. v. United Financial Group, Inc., 576 F.2d 217, 223 n. 13 (9th Cir.1978), the court explained that the result in Reading was intended to prevent general creditors from benefitting at the expense of innocent parties.

While tangentially related to the issue before us, there are cases permitting administrative charges against the estate for unsuccessful opposition to claims by the trustee. In In re E.A. Nord Co., Inc., ...

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