Myers v. Martin ( 1996 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    1996 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    5-7-1996
    In Re: Martin
    Precedential or Non-Precedential:
    Docket 95-1581
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    Recommended Citation
    "In Re: Martin" (1996). 1996 Decisions. Paper 186.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1996/186
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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    __________________
    No. 95-1581
    __________________
    IN RE: JOHN C. MARTIN; SALLY A. MARTIN,
    Debtors
    JO ANN MYERS; MELVIN MORANE
    v.
    JOHN C. MARTIN; SALLY A. MARTIN
    John C. Martin and Sally Martin, husband and wife,
    Appellants
    __________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. Civil No. 94-01717)
    __________________
    Argued:    Tuesday, March 12, 1996
    Before: NYGAARD, SAROKIN and ALDISERT, Circuit Judges
    (Filed May 7, 1996)
    __________________
    Michael B. Goodman
    Steven H. Lupin (argued)
    Carl N. Weiner
    HAMBURG, RUBIN, MULLIN,
    MAXWELL & LUPIN
    375 Morris Road
    P.O. Box 1479
    Lansdale, PA 19446
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS
    Kevin J. Sommar (argued)
    SOMMAR, TRACY & SOMMAR
    210 South Broad Street
    Lansdale, PA 19446
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEES
    __________________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    __________________
    ALDISERT, Circuit Judge
    This appeal by a creditor arises from a district court
    judgment reversing a bankruptcy court's order disapproving a
    stipulation of settlement entered into by the Appellees and the
    trustee for the debtors that mutually released all claims between
    them relating to the sale of the debtors' home to the Appellees
    without any payment by either party.
    The question for decision is whether the bankruptcy
    court abused its discretion by disapproving the stipulation after
    a jury verdict was entered in favor of the debtors and against
    the Appellees in a non-core proceeding in state court properly
    remanded there by the bankruptcy court. Eichenholtz v. Brennan,
    
    52 F.3d 478
    , 487 (3d Cir. 1995) (standard of review). The
    district court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.   158(a), and
    reversed the bankruptcy court. We have jurisdiction under 28
    U.S.C.   158(d), and find no abuse of discretion by the
    bankruptcy court. We therefore will reverse the district court
    judgment.
    I.
    This contest began with a mine-run dispute between
    parties to a real estate contract. In the spring of 1988, John
    and Sally Martin contracted to sell their house in Green Lane,
    Pennsylvania to Jo Ann Myers and Melvin Morane (hereafter jointly
    referred to as "the Myers"). After the contract was executed,
    the Myers refused to complete the purchase of the house,
    alleging, inter alia, that the septic system was in need of
    repair. Both parties eventually initiated actions in the
    Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas for breach of contract; the
    Martins prayed for damages, and the Myers sought specific
    performance. In addition, the Myers filed a lis pendens against
    the Martins' property, preventing its sale and limiting its value
    as a source of loan collateral.
    Because the Martins were relying on the real estate
    sale proceeds to service accumulated debts, this dispute caused
    them to suffer extreme economic hardship. Indeed, on February
    12, 1992, the Martins filed a voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy
    petition. The Chapter 7 filing stayed the Myers' action, and the
    Martins' action became property of the estate. Both actions
    subsequently were labeled non-core proceedings and were remanded
    to the Court of Common Pleas.
    The series of events that followed disclose some
    tension between the debtors and the trustee for the estate, or at
    least a fundamental breakdown in communications. The trustee
    announced to the bankruptcy judge on September 14, 1993, that she
    had reached an agreement with the Myers, resolving their dispute
    with the debtors, and providing for a mutual release of the two
    state court actions. Assuming that there was an open-ended trial
    date for the state court action (as this had been true for
    approximately a year-and-a-half), and that delay was detrimental
    to the estate, the trustee believed that she was acting in the
    best interests of the creditors by entering into this compromise.
    The terms were memorialized in a written stipulation of
    settlement filed by the trustee and the Myers on December 17,
    1993. On December 23, 1993, the bankruptcy court approved the
    stipulation.
    The Martins then filed an objection to the stipulation,
    on the ground that the bankruptcy court had approved the
    stipulation in violation of Rule 9019(a), Federal Rules of
    Bankruptcy Procedure, which provides:
    On motion by the trustee and after notice and
    a hearing, the court may approve a compromise
    or settlement. Notice shall be given to
    creditors, the United States trustee, the
    debtor, and indenture trustees as provided in
    Rule 2002 and to any other entity as the
    court may direct.
    The bankruptcy court acknowledged that its prior approval was
    premature, and vacated the prior approval. The bankruptcy court
    formally noticed the debtors and, on January 13, 1994, held a
    hearing on the trustee's motion to approve the stipulation.
    At the hearing, the debtors objected to the stipulation
    because their state court action against the Myers was ready for
    trial. Apparently, the trustee had not informed the debtors of
    her negotiations with the Myers regarding the possibility of a
    mutual release of claims. And meanwhile, unbeknownst to the
    trustee and the bankruptcy court, the Martins had convinced the
    state court to grant an expedited trial date of January 31, 1994.
    Recognizing the potential to recover additional property for the
    estate, the trustee "did not argue in favor of its ... [m]otion"
    to approve the stipulation. Brief of Appellees at 5. When
    called to testify by the Myers' counsel, who argued in favor of
    the trustee's motion, the trustee's counsel stated that, although
    she [the trustee] believed the stipulation was in the best
    interest of the estate at the time she signed it, she would not
    have agreed to the stipulation had she known of the expedited
    trial date arranged by the Martins. N.T. (1/25/94) at 3-8.
    After hearing extensive testimony on the merits of both
    pending state court suits, the bankruptcy court engaged in a
    discussion with counsel regarding the forthcoming trial in the
    state court. In this dialogue, the Myers' counsel indicated that
    resolution of the state trial would have no effect on the
    validity of the stipulation. The bankruptcy court deferred
    ruling on the trustee's motion to approve the stipulation until a
    date certain, to wit, February 8, 1994.
    Meanwhile, the Martins' state court action proceeded to
    trial on January 31, 1994, and the Martins obtained a jury
    verdict of $150,500 against the Myers. Thereafter, on February
    8, 1994, the bankruptcy court informed the parties that the court
    was aware that the state court trial had occurred, and inquired
    as to the results. The Myers' counsel objected to the
    introduction of the jury verdict into the record because "the
    hearing had concluded on the trustee's motion to approve the
    stipulation" and because the trustee had acted "in contravention
    of that stipulation [by] authoriz[ing] special counsel to proceed
    with the action that [s]he agreed was ended with respect to us."
    N.T. (2/8/94) at 3.
    Faced with the potential increase of $150,500 in the
    bankruptcy estate, the bankruptcy court denied the pending motion
    to approve the stipulation, explaining:
    [T]he result's pretty obvious what I have to
    do. If I were going to grant that motion,
    and I felt sure it should be granted, I would
    have granted it. I wouldn't have made the
    poor Court go through a jury trial. I mean I
    wouldn't have wasted the taxpayers' money to
    that extent if I had a question. But I
    wanted to see whether it was actually going
    to come off, because I thought there was a
    possibility. It may not come off again. And
    then I wasn't going to piddle around anymore.
    But it did come off, apparently. And I had
    no idea what the result would be, obviously,
    although the Judge did call me beforehand
    because he wanted to make sure that he should
    go forward with it. And I said, yeah, as far
    as I know you can. And I assumed they would,
    and they did, obviously. So I won't approve
    that stipulation.
    N.T. (2/8/94) at 8. An order denying the motion was filed the
    following day.
    On February 18, 1994, the Myers filed a notice of
    appeal with the district court, challenging the bankruptcy
    court's order denying the trustee's motion. The district judge
    scheduled a telephone conference with the counsel for the parties
    on May 19, 1995, after which the district court entered an order
    reversing the bankruptcy court's order and remanding the matter
    back to the bankruptcy court with instructions to approve the
    stipulation entered into between the trustee and the Myers. The
    district court determined that the trustee had violated her duty
    of good faith and fair dealing by refusing to support her own
    motion to approve the stipulation and by authorizing the Martins
    to pursue a state court claim subsequent to entering into a valid
    settlement agreement with the Myers. This appeal by the debtors
    followed.
    II.
    To minimize litigation and expedite the administration
    of a bankruptcy estate, "[c]ompromises are favored in
    bankruptcy." 9 Collier on Bankruptcy   9019.03[1] (15th ed.
    1993). Indeed, it is an unusual case in which there is not some
    litigation that is settled between the representative of the
    estate and an adverse party. Under Bankruptcy Rule 9019, a
    bankruptcy judge has the authority to approve a compromise of a
    claim, provided that the debtor, trustee and creditors are given
    twenty days' notice of the hearing on approval of a compromise or
    settlement by the trustee. Bankruptcy Rule 2002(a)(3).
    Here, the ultimate issue on appeal is whether the
    bankruptcy court abused its discretion when it disapproved the
    compromise. This particular process of bankruptcy court approval
    requires a bankruptcy judge to assess and balance the value of
    the claim that is being compromised against the value to the
    estate of the acceptance of the compromise proposal. Taking our
    cue from Protective Committee Stockholders of TMT Trailer Ferry,
    Inc. v. Anderson, 
    390 U.S. 414
    , 424-25 (1968), we recognize four
    criteria that a bankruptcy court should consider in striking this
    balance: (1) the probability of success in litigation; (2) the
    likely difficulties in collection; (3) the complexity of the
    litigation involved, and the expense, inconvenience and delay
    necessarily attending it; and (4) the paramount interest of the
    creditors. See In re Neshaminy Office Bldg. Assocs., 
    62 B.R. 798
    , 803 (E.D. Pa. 1986).
    Our consideration of these four factors supports the
    bankruptcy court's decision to disapprove the stipulation.
    First, when the stipulation was disapproved, the debtors'
    probability of success was 100 percent, because the verdict
    already had been obtained. Second, the record reveals no
    expected difficulty in collection. Third, again because the
    verdict already had been obtained, there was neither
    inconvenience nor delay. And fourth, the interest of all
    creditors was served by collecting an additional $150,500 as
    property of the estate. Considered together, these factors
    clearly militate in favor of the bankruptcy court's decision to
    disapprove the stipulation, and thus suggest that there was no
    abuse of discretion.
    III.
    The district court reversed the bankruptcy court,
    however, because "the trustee did not act consistently with her
    obligation of good faith and fair dealing." 
    1995 WL 38952
     at
    *11. The district court reasoned that the trustee was obliged to
    honor the compromise she had struck with the Myers, and that her
    failure to do so constituted a breach of the duty of good faith
    and fair dealing. The district court concluded therefrom that
    the bankruptcy court should not have taken the expedited trial
    date or the outcome of the state court trial into consideration
    in deciding the motion to approve the stipulation.
    We have no quarrel with the district court's statement
    that the trustee was required to deal with the Myers with
    "honesty in fact in the conduct or transaction concerned ... and
    [to] refrain from doing anything that would destroy or injure the
    other party's right to receive the fruits of the contract."
    
    1995 WL 389592
     at *11 (citations and quotations omitted). The
    Restatement (Second) of Contracts   205 implies a duty of good
    faith and fair dealing for all contracts; the Restatement
    position has been adopted in Pennsylvania in limited situations,
    including a trustee's duty as a fiduciary to the creditors of an
    estate. Commodity Futures Trading Comm'n v. Weintraub, 
    471 U.S. 343
    , 354-55 (1985); Parkway Garage, Inc. v. City of Philadelphia,
    
    5 F.3d 685
    , 701 (3d Cir. 1993). Accordingly, the district court
    was correct in emphasizing the role of the trustee as a
    fiduciary.
    However, a trustee has a fiduciary relationship with
    all creditors of the estate. See Weintraub, 
    471 U.S. at 354-55
    .
    Indeed, under the Code a trustee must investigate all sources of
    income for the estate and "collect and reduce to money the
    property of the estate." 11 U.S.C.     704(1). She has the duty
    to maximize the value of the estate, Weintraub, 
    471 U.S. at 353
    ,
    and in so doing is "bound to be vigilant and attentive in
    advancing [the estate's] interests." In re Baird, 
    112 F. 960
    ,
    960 (D.C. Cir. 1902). In sum, "it is the trustee's duty to both
    the debtor and the creditor to realize from the estate all that
    is possible for distribution among the creditors." 4 Collier on
    Bankruptcy    704.01 (15th ed. 1993). Thus, this trustee was
    faced with a conflict between her fiduciary duty to the creditor
    body as a whole and the alleged duty to go forward with a
    settlement agreement favoring one creditor but otherwise
    detrimental to the estate.
    We cannot require a trustee herself to choose between
    these conflicting legal obligations. Rather, Rule 9019(a)
    demonstrates the legislature's intent to place this
    responsibility with the bankruptcy court. In order to make such
    a determination, the bankruptcy court must be apprised of all
    relevant information that will enable it to determine what course
    of action will be in the best interest of the estate.
    Accordingly, the trustee should inform the court and the parties
    of any changed circumstances since the entry into the stipulation
    of settlement. The trustee may even opt not to argue in favor of
    the stipulation, as was done here, if she no longer believes the
    settlement to be in the best interest of the estate. The trustee
    does not breach any term of the stipulation by doing so, for the
    bankruptcy court may nonetheless approve the settlement.
    Hence, we reject the proposition that a trustee is
    required to champion a motion to approve a stipulation that is no
    longer in the best interest of the estate. This trustee did not
    flout or breach any term of the stipulation. Nor did she
    withdraw the motion to approve the stipulation. Rather, at the
    hearing, the trustee simply elected not to argue in favor of her
    motion. Thus, the very nice question before us is the proper
    conduct of a trustee in her responsibility to all creditors, the
    debtor and the court. This appeal raises a very narrow issue,
    and we will not expand the matter beyond its perimeters.
    Accordingly, we will not constrain a bankruptcy trustee from
    fulfilling her statutory duty to the estate and the creditor body
    as a whole by preventing her from informing the court and the
    parties of changed circumstances.
    This interpretation comports with our understanding of
    the Bankruptcy Rules and Code. Settlement agreements frequently
    involve the disposition of assets of the estate. The Code
    contemplates these transactions, but restricts a trustee's
    ability to use and sell such assets. Section 363 provides:
    The trustee, after notice and a hearing, may
    use, sell, or lease, other than in the
    ordinary course of business, property of the
    estate.
    11 U.S.C.   363(b)(1) (emphasis added); see In re Roth American,
    Inc., 
    975 F.2d 949
    , 953 (3d Cir. 1992) (post-petition extension
    of collective bargaining agreement was outside ordinary course of
    business and was not enforceable where not approved under Section
    363). The instant agreement compromised an asset of the debtors'
    estate. And clearly, this act ventured beyond the domain of
    transactions that the Martins encountered in the ordinary course
    of business prior to the filing of bankruptcy, thereby
    implicating Section 363.   See In re Roth American, Inc., 
    975 F.2d at 954
    . The import of Section 363 is that a trustee is
    prohibited from acting unilaterally; this schema is intended to
    protect both debtors and creditors (as well as trustees) by
    subjecting a trustee's actions to complete disclosure and review
    by the creditors of the estate and by the bankruptcy court.
    The approval process thus is integral to the proper
    functioning of a liquidation, and the court relies heavily on the
    trustee, who is entrusted to represent the creditor body.
    Indeed, under normal circumstances the court would defer to the
    trustee's judgment so long as there is a legitimate business
    justification. In re Schipper, 
    933 F.2d 513
    , 515 (7th Cir.
    1990). If, however, a trustee is prohibited from informing the
    court of changed circumstance, or from advocating on behalf of
    creditors in light of changed circumstances, a bankruptcy court
    could proceed without full information, and the creditor body
    could suffer.
    Accordingly, we conclude that the better course is to
    allow a trustee who fulfills her statutory duty to maximize
    assets of the estate the opportunity to report the change in
    circumstances to the court and to the creditors; such an act
    without more would not constitute a breach of contract. What the
    trustee did here was to fulfill her obligations to all creditors,
    as required by, inter alia, 11 U.S.C.   704(1). Although a party
    to the stipulation, the trustee was not bound to vigorously urge
    the court to accept it in light of changed circumstances that
    added $150,500 to the corpus of the bankruptcy estate. Indeed,
    had she done so, a serious question of breach of a fiduciary
    responsibility to all creditors would have arisen. Moreover, she
    took no affirmative steps to withdraw the motion to approve, but
    simply supplied additional information to the court, disclosing
    the state court verdict.
    Thus we conclude that the trustee did not breach the
    settlement by allowing the Martins to proceed with the trial
    pending the bankruptcy court's approval of the settlement. While
    we recognize that some jurisdictions have concluded that a
    stipulation of settlement is binding upon the parties pending
    approval of the settlement by the bankruptcy court, see, e.g., In
    re Lyons Trans. Lines, Inc., 
    163 B.R. 474
    , 476 (Bankr. W.D. Pa.
    1994); In re Columbus Plaza, Inc., 
    79 B.R. 710
    , 715 (Bankr. S.D.
    Ohio 1987); In re Tidewater Group, 
    8 B.R. 930
    , 933 (Bankr. N.D.
    Ga. 1981); but see In re Sparks, 
    190 B.R. 842
    , 845 (Bankr. N.D.
    Ill. 1996) (holding bankruptcy court approval a prerequisite to
    enforceability), we think that such a rule is inapplicable to the
    unique facts of this case.
    Here, the bankruptcy judge deferred his determination
    of whether to approve the settlement for the express purpose of
    seeing whether the trial would actually take place. The judge
    thus essentially issued a stamp of approval to behavior on the
    part of the trustee that is violative of the settlement -- i.e.,
    permitting the Martins to proceed with the trial despite the
    agreement to settle the litigation. We conclude that where a
    bankruptcy court formally endorses a course of action pending its
    approval of a stipulation of settlement, no party who follows
    this course of action can be found to have breached the
    settlement. We emphasize that in reaching this conclusion we do
    not decide the broader issue of whether, absent intervention of a
    bankruptcy court, parties are bound by the terms of a settlement
    pending final approval of the bankruptcy court.
    Accordingly, we conclude that the conduct of this
    trustee did not constitute a breach of her duty of good faith and
    fair dealing. In ruling that such a breach occurred, the
    district court erred. The bankruptcy court's subsequent
    disapproval of the stipulation agreement was within the sound
    discretion of the bankruptcy court.
    IV.
    We have considered all arguments advanced by the
    parties and conclude that no further discussion is necessary.
    We will reverse the judgment of the district court
    reversing the bankruptcy court.