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Alhambra CA, bankruptcy Lawyer

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    TITLE 11 - BANKRUPTCY
    CHAPTER 11 - REORGANIZATION
    
                            CHAPTER 11 - REORGANIZATION                    
    
    
                    SUBCHAPTER I - OFFICERS AND ADMINISTRATION            
        Sec.                                                     
        1101.       Definitions for this chapter.                         
        1102.       Creditors' and equity security holders' committees.   
        1103.       Powers and duties of committees.                      
        1104.       Appointment of trustee or examiner.                   
        1105.       Termination of trustee's appointment.                 
        1106.       Duties of trustee and examiner.                       
        1107.       Rights, powers, and duties of debtor in possession.   
        1108.       Authorization to operate business.                    
        1109.       Right to be heard.                                    
        1110.       Aircraft equipment and vessels.                       
        1111.       Claims and interests.                                 
        1112.       Conversion or dismissal.                              
        1113.       Rejection of collective bargaining agreements.        
        1114.       Payment of insurance benefits to retired employees.   
        1115.       Property of the estate.                               
        1116.       Duties of trustee or debtor in possession in small
                     business cases.                                      
    
                             SUBCHAPTER II - THE PLAN                     
        1121.       Who may file a plan.                                  
        1122.       Classification of claims or interests.                
        1123.       Contents of plan.                                     
        1124.       Impairment of claims or interests.                    
        1125.       Postpetition disclosure and solicitation.             
        1126.       Acceptance of plan.                                   
        1127.       Modification of plan.                                 
        1128.       Confirmation hearing.                                 
        1129.       Confirmation of plan.                                 
    
                     SUBCHAPTER III - POSTCONFIRMATION MATTERS             
        1141.       Effect of confirmation.                               
        1142.       Implementation of plan.                               
        1143.       Distribution.                                         
        1144.       Revocation of an order of confirmation.               
        1145.       Exemption from securities laws.                       
        1146.       Special tax provisions.                               
    
                      SUBCHAPTER IV - RAILROAD REORGANIZATION              
        1161.       Inapplicability of other sections.                    
        1162.       Definition.                                           
        1163.       Appointment of trustee.                               
        1164.       Right to be heard.                                    
        1165.       Protection of the public interest.                    
        1166.       Effect of subtitle IV of title 49 and of Federal,
                     State, or local regulations.                         
        1167.       Collective bargaining agreements.                     
        1168.       Rolling stock equipment.                              
        1169.       Effect of rejection of lease of railroad line.        
        1170.       Abandonment of railroad line.                         
        1171.       Priority claims.                                      
        1172.       Contents of plan.                                     
        1173.       Confirmation of plan.                                 
        1174.       Liquidation.                                          
    
                           HISTORICAL AND REVISION NOTES                   
    
                              LEGISLATIVE STATEMENTS                      
          Chapter 11 of the House amendment is derived in large part from
        chapter 11 as contained in the House bill. Unlike chapter 11 of the
        Senate amendment, chapter 11 of the House amendment does not
        represent an extension of chapter X of current law [chapter 10 of
        former title 11] or any other chapter of the Bankruptcy Act [former
        title 11]. Rather chapter 11 of the House amendment takes a new
        approach consolidating subjects dealt with under chapters VIII, X,
        XI, and XII of the Bankruptcy Act [chapters 8, 10, 11, and 12 of
        former title 11]. The new consolidated chapter 11 contains no
        special procedure for companies with public debt or equity security
        holders. Instead, factors such as the standard to be applied to
        solicitation of acceptances of a plan of reorganization are left to
        be determined by the court on a case-by-case basis. In order to
        insure that adequate investigation of the debtor is conducted to
        determine fraud or wrongdoing on the part of present management, an
        examiner is required to be appointed in all cases in which the
        debtor's fixed, liquidated, and unsecured debts, other than debts
        for goods, services, or taxes, or owing to an insider, exceed $5
        million. This should adequately represent the needs of public
        security holders in most cases. However, in addition, section 1109
        of the House amendment enables both the Securities and Exchange
        Commission and any party in interest who is creditor, equity
        security holder, indenture trustee, or any committee representing
        creditors or equity security holders to raise and appear and be
        heard on any issue in a case under chapter 11. This will enable the
        bankruptcy court to evaluate all sides of a position and to
        determine the public interest. This approach is sharply contrasted
        to that under chapter X of present law in which the public interest
        is often determined only in terms of the interest of public
        security holders. The advisory role of the Securities and Exchange
        Commission will enable the court to balance the needs of public
        security holders against equally important public needs relating to
        the economy, such as employment and production, and other factors
        such as the public health and safety of the people or protection of
        the national interest. In this context, the new chapter 11 deletes
        archaic rules contained in certain chapters of present law such as
        the requirement of an approval hearing and the prohibition of
        prepetition solicitation. Such requirements were written in an age
        before the enactment of the Trust Indenture Act [15 U.S.C. 77aaa et
        seq.] and the development of securities laws had occurred. The
        benefits of these provisions have long been outlived but the
        detriment of the provisions served to frustrate and delay effective
        reorganization in those chapters of the Bankruptcy Act in which
        such provisions applied. Chapter 11 thus represents a much needed
        revision of reorganization laws. A brief discussion of the history
        of this important achievement is useful to an appreciation of the
        monumental reform embraced in chapter 11.
          Under the existing Bankruptcy Act [former title 11] debtors
        seeking reorganization may choose among three reorganization
        chapters, chapter X, chapter XI, and chapter XII [chapters 10, 11,
        and 12 of former title 11]. Individuals and partnerships may file
        under chapter XI or, if they own property encumbered by mortgage
        liens, they may file under chapter XII. A corporation may file
        under either chapter X or chapter XI, but is ineligible to file
        under chapter XII. Chapter X was designed to facilitate the
        pervasive reorganization of corporations whose creditors include
        holders of publicly issued debt securities. Chapter XI, on the
        other hand, was designed to permit smaller enterprises to negotiate
        composition or extension plans with their unsecured creditors. The
        essential differences between chapters X and XI are as follows.
        Chapter X mandates that, first, an independent trustee be appointed
        and assume management control from the officers and directors of
        the debtor corporation; second, the Securities and Exchange
        Commission must be afforded an opportunity to participate both as
        an adviser to the court and as a representative of the interests of
        public security holders; third, the court must approve any proposed
        plan of reorganization, and prior to such approval, acceptances of
        creditors and shareholders may not be solicited; fourth, the court
        must apply the absolute priority rule; and fifth, the court has the
        power to affect, and grant the debtor a discharge in respect of,
        all types of claims, whether secured or unsecured and whether
        arising by reason of fraud or breach of contract.
          The Senate amendment consolidates chapters X, XI, and XII
        [chapters 10, 11, and 12 of former title 11], but establishes a
        separate and distinct reorganization procedure for "public
        companies." The special provisions applicable to "public companies"
        are tantamount to the codification of chapter X of the existing
        Bankruptcy Act and thus result in the creation of a "two-track
        system." The narrow definition of the term "public company" would
        require many businesses which could have been rehabilitated under
        chapter XI to instead use the more cumbersome procedures of chapter
        X, whether needed or not.
          The special provisions of the Senate amendment applicable to a
        "public company" are as follows:
          (a) Section 1101(3) defines a "public company" as a debtor who,
        within 12 months prior to the filing of the petition, had
        outstanding $5 million or more in debt and had not less than 1000
        security holders;
          (b) Section 1104(a) requires the appointment of a disinterested
        trustee irrespective of whether creditors support such appointment
        and whether there is cause for such appointment;
          (c) Section 1125(f) prohibits the solicitation of acceptances of
        a plan of reorganization prior to court approval of such plan even
        though the solicitation complies with all applicable securities
        laws;
          (d) Section 1128(a) requires the court to conduct a hearing on
        any plan of reorganization proposed by the trustee or any other
        party;
          (e) Section 1128(b) requires the court to refer any plans "worthy
        of consideration" to the Securities and Exchange Commission for
        their examination and report, prior to court approval of a plan;
        and
          (f) Section 1128(c) and section 1130(a)(7) requires the court to
        approve a plan or plans which are "fair and equitable" and comply
        with the other provisions of chapter 11.
          The record of the Senate hearings on S. 2266 and the House
        hearings on H.R. 8200 is replete with evidence of the failure of
        the reorganization provisions of the existing Bankruptcy Act
        [former title 11] to meet the needs of insolvent corporations in
        today's business environment. Chapter X [chapter 10 of former title
        11] was designed to impose rigid and formalized procedures upon the
        reorganization of corporations and, although designed to protect
        public creditors, has often worked to the detriment of such
        creditors. As the House report has noted:
          The negative results under chapter X [chapter 10 of former title
        11] have resulted from the stilted procedures, under which
        management is always ousted and replaced by an independent trustee,
        the courts and the Securities and Exchange Commission examine the
        plan of reorganization in great detail, no matter how long that
        takes, and the court values the business, a time consuming and
        inherently uncertain procedure.
          The House amendment deletes the "public company" exception,
        because it would codify the well recognized infirmities of chapter
        X [chapter 10 of former title 11], because it would extend the
        chapter X approach to a large number of new cases without regard to
        whether the rigid and formalized procedures of chapter X are
        needed, and because it is predicated upon the myth that provisions
        similar to those contained in chapter X are necessary for the
        protection of public investors. Bankruptcy practice in large
        reorganization cases has also changed substantially in the 40 years
        since the Chandler Act [June 22, 1938, ch. 575, 52 Stat. 883,
        amending former title 11] was enacted. This change is, in large
        part, attributable to the pervasive effect of the Federal
        securities laws and the extraordinary success of the Securities and
        Exchange Commission in sensitizing both management and members of
        the bar to the need for full disclosure and fair dealing in
        transactions involving publicly held securities.
          It is important to note that Congress passed the Chandler Act
        [June 22, 1938, ch. 575, 52 Stat. 883, amending former title 11]
        prior to enactment of the Trust Indenture Act of 1939 [15 U.S.C.
        section 77aaa et seq.] and prior to the definition and enforcement
        of the disclosure requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 [15
        U.S.C. 77a et seq.] and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 [15
        U.S.C. 78a et seq.]. The judgments made by the 75th Congress in
        enacting the Chandler Act are not equally applicable to the
        financial markets of 1978. First of all, most public debenture
        holders are neither weak nor unsophisticated investors. In most
        cases, a significant portion of the holders of publicly issued
        debentures are sophisticated institutions, acting for their own
        account or as trustees for investment funds, pension funds, or
        private trusts. In addition, debenture holders, sophisticated, and
        unsophisticated alike, are represented by indenture trustees,
        qualified under section 77ggg of the Trust Indenture Act [probably
        should be "section 307" which is 15 U.S.C. 77ggg]. Given the high
        standard of care to which indenture trustees are bound, they are
        invariably active and sophisticated participants in efforts to
        rehabilitate corporate debtors in distress.
          It is also important to note that in 1938 when the Chandler Act
        [June 22, 1938, ch. 575, 52 Stat. 883, amending former title 11]
        was enacted, public investors commonly held senior, not
        subordinated, debentures and corporations were very often privately
        owned. In this environment, the absolute priority rule protected
        debenture holders from an erosion of their position in favor of
        equity holders. Today, however, if there are public security
        holders in a case, they are likely to be holders of subordinated
        debentures and equity and thus the application of the absolute
        priority rule under chapter X [chapter 10 of former title 11] leads
        to the exclusion, rather than the protection, of the public.
          The primary problem posed by chapter X [chapter 10 of former
        title 11] is delay. The modern corporation is a complex and
        multifaceted entity. Most corporations do not have a significant
        market share of the lines of business in which they compete. The
        success, and even the survival, of a corporation in contemporary
        markets depends on three elements: First, the ability to attract
        and hold skilled management; second, the ability to obtain credit;
        and third, the corporation's ability to project to the public an
        image of vitality. Over and over again, it is demonstrated that
        corporations which must avail themselves of the provisions of the
        Bankruptcy Act [former title 11] suffer appreciable deterioration
        if they are caught in a chapter X proceeding for any substantial
        period of time.
          There are exceptions to this rule. For example, King Resources
        filed a chapter X [chapter 10 of former title 11] petition in the
        District of Colorado and it emerged from such proceeding as a
        solvent corporation. The debtor's new found solvency was not,
        however, so much attributable to a brilliant rehabilitation program
        conceived by a trustee, but rather to a substantial appreciation in
        the value of the debtor's oil and uranium properties during the
        pendency of the proceedings.
          Likewise, Equity Funding is always cited as an example of a
        successful chapter X [chapter 10 of former title 11] case. But it
        should be noted that in Equity Funding there was no question about
        retaining existing management. Rather, Equity Funding involved
        fraud on a grand scale. Under the House amendment with the deletion
        of the mandatory appointment of a trustee in cases involving
        "public companies," a bankruptcy judge, in a case like Equity
        Funding, would presumably have little difficulty in concluding that
        a trustee should be appointed under section 1104(6).
          While I will not undertake to list the chapter X [chapter 10 of
        former title 11] failures, it is important to note a number of
        cases involving corporations which would be "public companies"
        under the Senate amendment which have successfully skirted the
        shoals of chapter X and confirmed plans of arrangement in chapter
        XI [chapter 11 of former title 11]. Among these are Daylin, Inc.
        ("Daylin") and Colwell Mortgage Investors ("Colwell").
          Daylin filed a chapter XI [chapter 11 of former title 11]
        petition on February 26, 1975, and confirmed its plan of
        arrangement on October 20, 1976. The success of its turnaround is
        best evidenced by the fact that it had consolidated net income of
        $6,473,000 for the first three quarters of the 1978 fiscal year.
          Perhaps the best example of the contrast between chapter XI and
        chapter X [chapters 11 and 10 of former title 11] is the recent
        case of In re Colwell Mortgage Investors. Colwell negotiated a
        recapitalization plan with its institutional creditors, filed a
        proxy statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission, and
        solicited consents of its creditors and shareholders prior to
        filing its chapter XI petition. Thereafter, Colwell confirmed its
        plan of arrangement 41 days after filing its chapter XI petition.
        This result would have been impossible under the Senate amendment
        since Colwell would have been a "public company."
          There are a number of other corporations with publicly held debt
        which have successfully reorganized under chapter XI [chapter 11 of
        former title 11]. Among these are National Mortgage Fund (NMF),
        which filed a chapter XI petition in the northern district of Ohio
        on June 30, 1976. Prior to commencement of the chapter XI
        proceeding, NMF filed a proxy statement with the Securities and
        Exchange Commission and solicited acceptances to a proposed plan of
        arrangement. The NMF plan was subsequently confirmed on December
        14, 1976. The Securities and Exchange Commission did not file a
        motion under section 328 of the Bankruptcy Act [section 728 of
        former title 11] to transfer the case to chapter X [chapter 10 of
        former title 11] and a transfer motion which was filed by private
        parties was denied by the court.
          While there are other examples of large publicly held companies
        which have successfully reorganized in chapter XI [chapter 11 of
        former title 11], including Esgrow, Inc. (C.D.Cal. 73-02510),
        Sherwood Diversified Services Inc. (S.D.N.Y. 73-B-213), and United
        Merchants and Manufacturers, Inc. (S.D.N.Y. 77-B-1513), the
        numerous successful chapter XI cases demonstrate two points: first,
        the complicated and time-consuming provisions of chapter X [chapter
        10 of former title 11] are not always necessary for the successful
        reorganization of a company with publicly held debt, and second,
        the more flexible provisions in chapter XI permit a debtor to
        obtain relief under the Bankruptcy Act [former title 11] in
        significantly less time than is required to confirm a plan of
        reorganization under chapter X of the Bankruptcy Act.
          One cannot overemphasize the advantages of speed and simplicity
        to both creditors and debtors. Chapter XI [chapter 11 of former
        title 11] allows a debtor to negotiate a plan outside of court and,
        having reached a settlement with a majority in number and amount of
        each class of creditors, permits the debtor to bind all unsecured
        creditors to the terms of the arrangement. From the perspective of
        creditors, early confirmation of a plan of arrangement: first,
        generally reduces administrative expenses which have priority over
        the claims of unsecured creditors; second, permits creditors to
        receive prompt distributions on their claims with respect to which
        interest does not accrue after the filing date; and third,
        increases the ultimate recovery on creditor claims by minimizing
        the adverse effect on the business which often accompanies efforts
        to operate an enterprise under the protection of the Bankruptcy Act
        [former title 11].
          Although chapter XI [chapter 11 of former title 11] offers the
        corporate debtor flexibility and continuity of management,
        successful rehabilitation under chapter XI is often impossible for
        a number of reasons. First, chapter XI does not permit a debtor to
        "affect" secured creditors or shareholders, in the absence of their
        consent. Second, whereas a debtor corporation in chapter X [chapter
        10 of former title 11], upon the consummation of the plan or
        reorganization, is discharged from all its debts and liabilities, a
        corporation in chapter XI may not be able to get a discharge in
        respect of certain kinds of claims including fraud claims, even in
        cases where the debtor is being operated under new management. The
        language of chapter 11 in the House amendment solves these problems
        and thus increases the utility and flexibility of the new chapter
        11, as compared to chapter XI of the existing Bankruptcy Act
        [chapter 11 of former title 11].
          Those who would urge the adoption of a two-track system have two
        major obstacles to meet. First, the practical experience of those
        involved in business rehabilitation cases, practitioners, debtors,
        and bankruptcy judges, has been that the more simple and
        expeditious procedures of chapter XI [chapter 11 of former title
        11] are appropriate in the great majority of cases. While attempts
        have been made to convince the courts that a chapter X [chapter 10
        of former title 11] proceeding is required in every case where
        public debt is present, the courts have categorically rejected such
        arguments. Second, chapter X has been far from a success. Of the
        991 chapter X cases filed during the period of January 1, 1967,
        through December 31, 1977, only 664 have been terminated. Of those
        cases recorded as "terminated," only 140 resulted in consummated
        plans. This 21 percent success rate suggests one of the reasons for
        the unpopularity of chapter X.
          In summary, it has been the experience of the great majority of
        those who have testified before the Senate and House subcommittees
        that a consolidated approach to business rehabilitation is
        warranted. Such approach is adopted in the House amendment.
          Having discussed the general reasons why chapter 11 of the House
        amendment is sorely needed, a brief discussion of the differences
        between the House bill, Senate amendment, and the House amendment,
        is in order. Since chapter 11 of the House amendment rejects the
        concept of separate treatment for a public company, sections
        1101(3), 1104(a), 1125(f), 1128, and 1130(a)(7) of the Senate
        amendment have been deleted.
    
                                    AMENDMENTS                            
          2005 - Pub. L. 109-8, title III, Sec. 321(a)(2), title IV, Sec.
        436(b), Apr. 20, 2005, 119 Stat. 95, 113, added items 1115 and
        1116.
          1988 - Pub. L. 100-334, Sec. 2(c), June 16, 1988, 102 Stat. 613,
        added item 1114.
          1984 - Pub. L. 98-353, title III, Secs. 514(b), 541(b), July 10,
        1984, 98 Stat. 387, 391, added item 1113 and substituted
        "Implementation" for "Execution" in item 1142.
          1983 - Pub. L. 97-449, Sec. 5(a)(1), Jan. 12, 1983, 96 Stat.
        2442, substituted "subtitle IV of title 49" for "Interstate
        Commerce Act" in item 1166.
    
    -End-
    

Alhambra CA, Bankruptcy Lawyer