Adventure Resources v. Holland , 137 F.3d 786 ( 1998 )


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  • PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    ADVENTURE RESOURCES,
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation; AMIGO SMOKELESS COAL
    COMPANY, a West Virginia
    corporation; TOMMY CREEK COAL
    COMPANY, a West Virginia
    corporation; GREEN MOUNTAIN
    ENERGY, INCORPORATED, a West
    Virginia corporation; M.A.E.
    SERVICES, INCORPORATED, a West
    Virginia corporation; MABEN ENERGY
    CORPORATION, a West Virginia
    corporation; RALEIGH LEASING,
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation; STONEY COAL COMPANY,
    a West Virginia corporation; SPRUCE
    LAUREL COAL COMPANY, a West           No. 96-1557
    Virginia corporation; HAWLEY COAL
    MINING CORPORATION, a West
    Virginia corporation; BICKFORD
    MINING, INCORPORATED, also known
    as Allports Coals, Incorporated, a
    West Virginia corporation; BARRETT
    FUEL CORPORATION, successor by
    merger to Beckley Lick Run
    Company, a West Virginia
    corporation; EAST GULF FUEL
    CORPORATION, a West Virginia
    corporation; COAL X EQUIPMENT &
    SUPPLY COMPANY, INCORPORATED,
    formerly known as Lakeside Supply
    Company, Incorporated, a West
    Virginia corporation; BECKLEY
    REPAIR & HYDRAULIC SERVICE,
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation; HALFWAY,
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation; CHESAPEAKE LEASING,
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation; PINEY FUEL
    CORPORATION, a West Virginia
    corporation; LAKESIDE LEASING,
    INCORPORATED, formerly known as
    Airplane Leasing, Incorporated, a
    West Virginia corporation; RALEIGH
    SERVICES, INCORPORATED, a West
    Virginia corporation; ATLAS COAL
    LEASING, INCORPORATED, a West
    Virginia corporation; SUGAR CAMP
    MINING, INCORPORATED, a West
    Virginia corporation; H. D.
    ENTERPRISES, LIMITED, a West
    Virginia corporation; JET COAL
    SERVICES, INCORPORATED, a West
    Virginia corporation; MICROBLACK,
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation; DOVER COAL SALES,
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation; NO. 10 MINING,
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation; PANTHER RED ASH LAND
    COMPANY, INCORPORATED, a West
    Virginia corporation,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    v.
    MICHAEL H. HOLLAND, MARTY D.
    HUDSON, ELLIOT A. SEGAL, PAUL R.
    2
    DEAN, Trustees of the UMWA 1950
    Pension Trusts and UMWA 1974
    Pension Trusts; UNITED MINE
    WORKERS OF AMERICA 1974 PENSION
    TRUST; UNITED MINE WORKERS OF
    AMERICA 1950 PENSION TRUST;
    MICHAEL H. HOLLAND, MARTY D.
    HUDSON, ELLIOT A. SEGAL, THOMAS
    O. S. RAND, CARLTON R. SICKLES,
    and GAIL R. WILENSKY, WILLIAM P.
    HOBGOOD, Trustees of the United
    Mine Workers of America
    Combined Benefit Fund; UNITED
    MINE WORKERS OF AMERICA
    COMBINED FUND; MICHAEL H.
    HOLLAND, MARTY D. HUDSON,
    THOMAS F. CONNORS and ROBERT D.
    WALLACE, Trustees of the UMWA
    1992 Benefit Plan; UNITED MINE
    WORKERS OF AMERICA 1992 BENEFIT
    PLAN; MICHAEL H. HOLLAND, MARTY
    D. HUDSON, THOMAS F. CONNORS,
    ELLIOT A. SEGAL, Trustees of the
    UMWA 1993 Benefit Plan; UNITED
    MINE WORKERS OF AMERICA 1993
    BENEFIT PLAN; and MICHAEL H.
    HOLLAND, MARTY D. HUDSON, ELLIOT
    A. SEGAL, JOSEPH J. STAHL, II,
    Trustees of the UMWA Cash
    Deferred Savings Plan of 1988;
    UNITED MINE WORKERS OF AMERICA
    CASH DEFERRED SAVINGS PLAN OF
    1988,
    Defendants-Appellants,
    and
    3
    DONNA E. SHALALA, Secretary,
    Department of Health & Human
    Services, Social Security
    Administration of the United States
    of America,
    Defendant.
    ADVENTURE RESOURCES,
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    and
    AMIGO SMOKELESS COAL COMPANY, a
    West Virginia corporation; TOMMY
    CREEK COAL COMPANY, a West
    Virginia corporation; GREEN
    MOUNTAIN ENERGY, INCORPORATED, a
    West Virginia corporation; M.A.E.
    SERVICES, INCORPORATED, a West
    No. 96-1938
    Virginia corporation; MABEN ENERGY
    CORPORATION, a West Virginia
    corporation; RALEIGH LEASING,
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation; STONEY COAL COMPANY,
    a West Virginia corporation; SPRUCE
    LAUREL COAL COMPANY, a West
    Virginia corporation; HAWLEY COAL
    MINING CORPORATION, a West
    Virginia corporation; BICKFORD
    MINING, INCORPORATED, also known
    as Allports Coals, Incorporated, a
    West Virginia corporation; BARRETT
    4
    FUEL CORPORATION, successor by
    merger to Beckley Lick Run
    Company, a West Virginia
    corporation; EAST GULF FUEL
    CORPORATION, a West Virginia
    corporation; COAL X EQUIPMENT &
    SUPPLY COMPANY, INCORPORATED,
    formerly known as Lakeside Supply
    Company, Incorporated, a West
    Virginia corporation; BECKLEY
    REPAIR & HYDRAULIC SERVICE,
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation; HALFWAY,
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation; CHESAPEAKE LEASING,
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation; PINEY FUEL
    CORPORATION, a West Virginia
    corporation; LAKESIDE LEASING,
    INCORPORATED, formerly known as
    Airplane Leasing, Incorporated, a
    West Virginia corporation; RALEIGH
    SERVICES, INCORPORATED, a West
    Virginia corporation; ATLAS COAL
    LEASING, INCORPORATED, a West
    Virginia corporation; SUGAR CAMP
    MINING, INCORPORATED, a West
    Virginia corporation; H. D.
    ENTERPRISES, LIMITED, a West
    Virginia corporation; JET COAL
    SERVICES, INCORPORATED, a West
    Virginia corporation; MICROBLACK,
    5
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation; DOVER COAL SALES,
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation; NO. 10 MINING,
    INCORPORATED, a West Virginia
    corporation; PANTHER RED ASH LAND
    COMPANY, INCORPORATED, a West
    Virginia corporation,
    Plaintiffs,
    v.
    MICHAEL H. HOLLAND, MARTY D.
    HUDSON, ELLIOT A. SEGAL, PAUL R.
    DEAN, Trustees of the UMWA 1950
    Pension Trusts and UMWA 1974
    Pension Trusts; UNITED MINE
    WORKERS OF AMERICA 1974 PENSION
    TRUST; UNITED MINE WORKERS OF
    AMERICA 1950 PENSION TRUST;
    MICHAEL H. HOLLAND, MARTY D.
    HUDSON, ELLIOT A. SEGAL, THOMAS
    O. S. RAND, CARLTON R. SICKLES,
    and GAIL R. WILENSKY, WILLIAM P.
    HOBGOOD, Trustees of the United
    Mine Workers of America
    Combined Benefit Fund; UNITED
    MINE WORKERS OF AMERICA
    COMBINED FUND; MICHAEL H.
    HOLLAND, MARTY D. HUDSON,
    THOMAS F. CONNORS and ROBERT D.
    WALLACE, Trustees of the UMWA
    1992 Benefit Plan; UNITED MINE
    WORKERS OF AMERICA 1992 BENEFIT
    PLAN; MICHAEL H. HOLLAND, MARTY
    D. HUDSON, THOMAS F. CONNORS,
    6
    ELLIOT A. SEGAL, Trustees of the
    UMWA 1993 Benefit Plan; UNITED
    MINE WORKERS OF AMERICA 1993
    BENEFIT PLAN; and MICHAEL H.
    HOLLAND, MARTY D. HUDSON, ELLIOT
    A. SEGAL, JOSEPH J. STAHL, II,
    Trustees of the UMWA Cash
    Deferred Savings Plan of 1988;
    UNITED MINE WORKERS OF AMERICA
    CASH DEFERRED SAVINGS PLAN OF
    1988,
    Defendants-Appellees,
    and
    DONNA E. SHALALA, Secretary,
    Department of Health & Human
    Services, Social Security
    Administration of the United States
    of America,
    Defendant.
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of West Virginia, at Charleston.
    Charles H. Haden II, Chief District Judge.
    (CA-94-858-2, BK-91-50509, AP-93-197)
    Argued: August 13, 1997
    Decided: February 27, 1998
    Before RUSSELL,* Circuit Judge, HALL, Senior Circuit Judge,
    and MICHAEL, Senior United States District Judge for the
    Western District of Virginia, sitting by designation.
    _________________________________________________________________
    *Judge Russell participated in the decision of this case, but died prior
    to the time the opinion was issued. The opinion is filed by a quorum of
    the panel pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 46
    (d).
    7
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded with instructions by
    published opinion. Senior Judge Hall wrote the opinion, in which
    Judge Russell and Senior Judge Michael joined.
    _________________________________________________________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Jami Wintz McKeon, MORGAN, LEWIS & BOCKIUS,
    L.L.P., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for Appellants. John Allen Rol-
    lins, LEWIS, FRIEDBERG, GLASSER, CASEY & ROLLINS,
    Charleston, West Virginia, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: David W.
    Allen, Larry D. Newsome, Barbara Locklin-George, Brian H. Benjet,
    Office of the General Counsel, UMWA HEALTH & RETIREMENT
    FUNDS, Washington, D.C.; Marilyn L. Baker, MOONEY, GREEN,
    BAKER, GIBSON & SAINDON, P.C., Washington, D.C., for Appel-
    lants.
    _________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    HALL, Senior Circuit Judge:
    The primary question before us in this appeal is whether a debtor
    in bankruptcy operating under the aegis of Chapter 11 may, with
    regard to an executory contract in effect at the time of the filing of
    the petition for reorganization, continue to reap the benefits of its bar-
    gain without concern that the non-debtor party will be made whole for
    the debtor's unfulfilled prepetition obligations. We hold, in accor-
    dance with the pronouncement of the Supreme Court in NLRB v.
    Bildisco & Bildisco, that it may not.
    I.
    A.
    The Adventure Group comprises forty-six companies, all of which
    are affiliates or subsidiaries of Adventure Resources, Inc. The Adven-
    ture companies are involved, to varying degrees, in nearly every
    aspect of the production of coal. For instance, certain of the compa-
    8
    nies merely own or lease the mine properties and the coal beneath
    them. Other Adventure companies actually mine and prepare the coal,
    and still others provide support services such as supplies and equip-
    ment.
    In December 1992, twenty of the Adventure companies filed peti-
    tions for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code.
    Among the myriad of Adventure's creditors were six trusts estab-
    lished to provide pension, health, disability, and death benefits to
    members of the United Mine Workers of America and their depen-
    dents. Together, these trusts constitute the UMWA Health and Retire-
    ment Funds ("the Funds").
    Four of the trusts (the 1950 Pension Trust, the 1974 Pension Trust,
    the Cash Deferred Savings Plan of 1988, and the 1993 Benefit Plan)
    were created as the result of NBCWAs -- collective bargaining
    agreements negotiated by the UMWA with the Bituminous Coal
    Operators Association.1 The remaining two trusts (the Combined Ben-
    efit Fund and the 1992 Benefit Plan) exist by operation of law; they
    were established as a result of the enactment of the Coal Industry
    Retiree Health Benefit Act, 
    26 U.S.C. §§ 9701-9722
     (the "Coal Act").
    Adventure was among the coal operator signatories to the NBCWA
    of 1988, the collective bargaining agreement in effect at the time of
    the bankruptcy filing. Pursuant to the 1988 agreement, the employers
    undertook to ensure the funding of employee pension and health ben-
    efits initially payable during the contract term. In addition, the
    employers guaranteed the funding of benefits already being adminis-
    tered by the 1950 and 1974 Pension Trusts; those trusts were "incor-
    porated by reference and made a part of this Agreement." NATIONAL
    BITUMINOUS COAL WAGE AGREEMENT OF 1988 art. XX,§§ (b), (c)(1).
    Adventure did not live up to its part of the bargain. Instead, as evi-
    denced by the preliminary report of an independent business analysis
    prepared in 1988, Adventure engaged in a deliberate strategy of
    expanding its mining operations at the expense of its employees:
    _________________________________________________________________
    1 NBCWA is an abbreviation for "National Bituminous Coal Wage
    Agreement."
    9
    In 1985 and a portion of 1986, the companies began exten-
    sive mine development. . . . [M]ine development and sus-
    taining capital costs are not easily financed, and
    management was faced with significant cash obligations.
    Management felt that expanding vendor credit beyond the
    level being used at the time was impossible and sought other
    sources of funds. The decision was made to not make pay-
    ments, as due, to the mineworkers pension and benefit
    funds. . . . This "funding" mechanism was viewed as short-
    term but necessary, and the deferral of these payments was
    undertaken.
    May 5, 1988, Preliminary Report of David A. Harrah, CPA, to John
    P. Lamond, Treasurer, Westmoreland Coal Co.
    Adventure's "deferral" of its pension and health benefit contribu-
    tions was anything but short-term. Once it had initially defaulted on
    its payments to the Funds, Adventure continued to remain in arrears.
    Even after filing for reorganization, Adventure satisfied neither its
    ongoing obligations to the 1950 and 1974 Pension Trusts, nor those
    subsequently imposed by the Coal Act and the 1993 NBCWA.2 As a
    result of Adventure's business "`funding' mechanism," the Funds'
    claims may exceed $25 million, including approximately $4-5 million
    assessed during the 43-month duration of the Chapter 11 bankruptcy.3
    B.
    The twenty Adventure companies in Chapter 11, joined by eight
    non-debtor affiliates, filed this adversary proceeding in the bank-
    ruptcy court to determine the viability and priority of the claims filed
    by three of the trusts. See 
    28 U.S.C. § 157
    (b)(1) (conferring jurisdic-
    _________________________________________________________________
    2 To comply with the Coal Act, Adventure was required to make pay-
    ments to the Combined Benefit Fund and to the 1992 Benefit Plan (the
    "Coal Act trusts"). Consistent with the terms of the 1993 NBCWA,
    Adventure agreed to contribute to the Cash Deferred Savings Plan of
    1988 and to the 1993 Benefit Plan.
    3 On July 25, 1996, after the notice of appeal was filed in the instant
    matter, the bankruptcy court, upon Adventure's motion, converted the
    case to a liquidation proceeding under Chapter 7.
    10
    tion upon the bankruptcy judges over certain "core" bankruptcy pro-
    ceedings, as outlined in § 157(b)(2)). By order dated June 23, 1994,
    the district court, pursuant to its authority under 
    28 U.S.C. § 157
    (d),
    withdrew its reference of the proceeding to the bankruptcy court. The
    remaining three trusts were subsequently granted leave to intervene
    as additional defendants and to file a counter-complaint against
    Adventure.
    Following a period of discovery, the Funds moved for partial sum-
    mary judgment, contending that virtually all of their claims were enti-
    tled to be designated administrative expenses of the bankruptcy estate.
    See 
    11 U.S.C. § 507
    (a)(1) (according first priority to "administrative
    expenses allowed under section 503(b) of this title").4 The district
    court, by memorandum opinion and order dated March 8, 1996,
    granted the motion as to the claims filed by the Coal Act trusts. See
    note 2, supra. However, with respect to the vast bulk of the Funds'
    claims, i.e., the pre-bankruptcy amounts owed by Adventure to the
    1950 and 1974 Pension Trusts, the court below denied the motion.
    Adventure Resources, Inc. v. Holland, 
    193 B.R. 787
     (S.D. W. Va. 1996).5
    The district court concluded that the Funds' claims pursuant to the
    Coal Act did not accrue until after the filing of the Chapter 11 peti-
    tions in late 1992. The initial contributions and benefit premiums
    exacted by the terms of the Coal Act are, the district court ruled, taxes
    on the bankruptcy estates, and are therefore administrative expenses
    within the contemplation of 
    11 U.S.C. § 503
    (b)(1)(B)(i). 
    193 B.R. at 793-96
    .
    _________________________________________________________________
    4 Adventure's creditors have filed over $160 million in claims relating
    to its pre-bankruptcy operations. During the oral argument of this matter,
    counsel for the Chapter 7 trustee surmised that the sale of the estate's
    assets will generate only enough cash to pay the secured claims, the costs
    of the liquidation, and an unspecified portion of the expenses associated
    with the administration of the Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
    5 The parties do not appear to dispute that the claims filed by the 1993
    Benefit Plan and the Cash Deferred Savings Plan of 1988, to the extent
    that they are attributable to obligations assumed by Adventure pursuant
    to its 1993 wage agreement, see note 2, supra, are entitled to priority as
    postpetition administrative expenses of the bankruptcy estates.
    11
    Regarding Adventure's obligations to the 1950 and 1974 Pension
    Trusts, the district court dismissed the Funds' arguments that 
    11 U.S.C. §§ 1113
    (f) and 1114(e) (addressing, respectively, the rejection
    in bankruptcy of collective bargaining agreements and the payment of
    certain health insurance benefits to retired employees of Chapter 11
    debtors) conferred first priority status upon the entirety of those
    claims, regardless of whether they accrued prior to the filing of the
    petitions. The district court determined instead that any claims for
    benefit contributions payable pursuant to an NBCWA were entitled
    to administrative expense priority only insofar as they had initially
    arisen postpetition. 
    193 B.R. at 796-98
    .
    The Funds appeal that portion of the district court's order denying
    them summary judgment as to the claims of the Pension Trusts origi-
    nating prior to Adventure's immersion in bankruptcy. The Chapter 7
    trustee cross-appeals the remainder of the order granting summary
    judgment to the Funds on the Coal Act claims; the notice of cross-
    appeal incorporates the district court's order of June 26, 1996, deny-
    ing Adventure's post-proceeding motions for relief under Fed. R. Civ.
    P. 59(e) and 60(b).
    We agree with the district court that the Funds' claims under the
    Coal Act did not arise until after Adventure had already filed its peti-
    tions for reorganization. Inasmuch as these claims are for unpaid
    taxes, they must be accorded administrative expense priority. Conse-
    quently, we affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment to
    the Funds as to the Coal Act claims.
    The district court also correctly determined that the plain language
    of 
    11 U.S.C. §§ 1113
    (f) and 1114(e) does not accommodate the
    notion that Congress specifically intended to address through those
    statutes the priority of claims for unpaid pension benefit obligations.
    In the absence of specific direction from the legislative branch, we
    conclude that, where such claims emanate from the breach of a collec-
    tive bargaining agreement, they are to be granted priority in accor-
    dance with the law governing the treatment in bankruptcy of
    executory contracts in general.
    Thus, where the Chapter 11 debtor has assumed the benefits and
    obligations of an existing collective bargaining agreement, but does
    12
    not comply with its statutory duty to cure all defaults then extant, any
    claims arising from the debtor's failure to cure are entitled to first pri-
    ority as administrative expenses of the bankruptcy estate. Because the
    district court held to the contrary, i.e., that the Funds' claims are not
    entitled to any priority to the extent that they are attributable to prepe-
    tition defaults, we reverse its grant of summary judgment to Adven-
    ture as to the applicable Pension Trust claims. We will explain the
    reasons for our holdings in more detail below.
    II.
    The parties agree that no genuine issue of material fact exists at this
    stage of the litigation. Our task is simply to determine, on the undis-
    puted facts, which party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law
    concerning the issues on appeal. FED. R. CIV. P. 56(c). In that respect,
    our review of the district court's application of the law is, as always,
    de novo. Patten v. United States, 
    116 F.3d 1029
    , 1031 (4th Cir. 1997).
    III.
    A.
    Congress passed the Coal Act to redress the "looming insolvency"
    of the trusts that had been established by prior NBCWAs to provide
    health care benefits to retired coal miners. LTV Steel Co., Inc. v.
    Shalala (In re Chateaugay Corp.), 
    53 F.3d 478
    , 484-85 (2d Cir.
    1995). To that end, the Act created the Combined Benefit Fund to
    secure the continuation of health benefits for those retired miners who
    had been receiving them under the old system as of July 20, 1992. 
    26 U.S.C. § 9703
    (f). The Act also devised the 1992 Benefit Plan, which
    covered two other groups of miners: (1) those eligible for benefits as
    of February 1, 1993, and who retired by September 30, 1994; and
    (2) those "orphaned" upon the insolvency of an individual employer
    benefit plan. § 9712(b).
    With regard to both new trusts, the Coal Act assessed initial, "pre-
    funding" contributions against the coal operators who had signed the
    1988 NBCWA. See §§ 9704(i) (Combined Fund), 9712(d)(1)(A)
    (1992 Plan). The Act also specified that, beginning on February 1,
    13
    1993, the affected operators would pay health benefit premiums to the
    trusts, based on the number of beneficiaries assigned to them by the
    Social Security Administration. See #8E8E # 9704(b) (Combined Fund),
    9712(d)(1)(B) (1992 Plan). Lastly, the Act required the operators to
    pay additional premiums to the Combined Fund to provide death ben-
    efits for their employees and to ensure health coverage for the indus-
    try's unassigned beneficiaries. § 9704(c), (d).
    B.
    Section 503 of the Bankruptcy Code provides for the payment of
    expenses incurred in administering the bankruptcy estate. Allowable
    administrative expenses commonly include the direct costs of preserv-
    ing the estate (for example, postpetition wages earned by the debtor's
    employees) and compensation for services rendered to the estate by
    professionals, such as attorneys and accountants. See 
    11 U.S.C. § 503
    (b)(1)(A), (4). We are more concerned at present, however, with
    that category of administrative expenses comprising"any tax . . .
    incurred by the estate[.]" § 503(b)(1)(B)(i).6 Claims for taxes, like
    those for wages, professional fees, and other administrative expenses,
    are entitled to priority over all other unsecured claims. § 507(a)(1).
    1.
    The trustee contends that the assessments mandated by the Coal
    Act are not "taxes." The pertinent case authority is to the contrary. See
    In re Leckie Smokeless Coal Co., 
    99 F.3d 573
    , 583 (4th Cir. 1996)
    (Coal Act premiums are taxes whose validity may be determined in
    the federal courts notwithstanding the asserted jurisdictional bars of
    the Anti-Injunction Act and the Declaratory Judgment Act), cert.
    denied, 
    117 S. Ct. 1251
     (1997).
    _________________________________________________________________
    6 Section 503(b)(1)(B)(i) excepts from its reach "a tax of a kind speci-
    fied in section 507(a)(8) of this title." The latter provision, in turn,
    addresses the priority accorded claims of "governmental units" for, inter
    alia, certain income, property, employment, and excise taxes. Regardless
    of how one might characterize the Funds' Coal Act claims within the
    broader rubric of "taxes," the Funds themselves are not governmental
    units, and, therefore, their claims are not within the ambit of § 507(a)(8).
    Adventure Resources, 
    193 B.R. at
    795 n.15. This aspect of the district
    court's ruling has not been challenged on appeal.
    14
    In Leckie, we recognized that Coal Act obligations "are involuntary
    pecuniary burdens imposed by Congress for the public purpose of
    restoring financial stability to coal miners' benefit plans,[7] and those
    burdens have been imposed as an exercise of Congress's taxing
    power." 
    Id.,
     citing Chateaugay at498.8 There is no doubt, then, that
    the assessments meet this circuit's definition of a"tax."9
    2.
    Remaining is the question of whether the taxes levied by the Coal
    Act were, in the case of the Adventure companies,"incurred by the
    estate[s]." The trustee argues in the negative, pointing out that the
    Coal Act was signed into law on October 24, 1992, antedating the fil-
    ing of the bankruptcy petitions by more than a month. Under the
    terms of the statute, however, no claim could accrue to the Combined
    Fund and the 1992 Plan until February 1, 1993, well after the bank-
    ruptcy estates had been created.10
    _________________________________________________________________
    7 Cf. New Neighborhoods, Inc. v. W. Va. Workers' Comp. Fund, 
    886 F.2d 714
    , 718 (4th Cir. 1989) ("The `public' purpose of systems such as
    the [workers' compensation scheme] in force and effect in West Virginia
    is to allocate the burden of the costs of injured employees and/or their
    dependents among employers rather than among the general public.").
    8 The court in Chateaugay was faced with the precise issue before us.
    The Second Circuit concluded that Coal Act assessments are taxes within
    the meaning of § 503(b)(1)(B)(i), entitled to administrative expense pri-
    ority under § 507(a)(1).
    9 See United States v. City of Huntington, W. Va., 
    999 F.2d 71
    , 73 n.4
    (4th Cir. 1993):
    For the purpose of determining claim priority in the context of
    bankruptcy, the courts have established the following elements
    of a tax: "(a) An involuntary pecuniary burden, regardless of
    name, laid upon individuals or property; (b) Imposed by, or
    under authority of the legislature; (c) for public purposes,
    including the purpose of defraying expenses of government of
    undertakings authorized by it; and (d) Under the police or taxing
    power of the state."
    (quoting In re Lorber Industries, 
    675 F.2d 1062
    , 1066 (9th Cir. 1982)).
    10 See 
    26 U.S.C.A. § 9702
    (c) ("The first plan year of the Combined
    Fund shall begin February 1, 1993. . . .") and 
    26 U.S.C.A. § 9712
    (b)(2)
    15
    A "claim" is a "right to payment, whether or not such right is
    reduced to judgment, liquidated, unliquidated, fixed, contingent,
    matured, unmatured, disputed, undisputed, legal, equitable, secured,
    or unsecured[.]" 
    11 U.S.C.A. § 101
    (5)(A) (West 1993). Claims, how-
    ever, do not exist in a vacuum; they must be possessed by creditors.
    See § 101(10) ("creditor" defined as, inter alia, an "entity that has a
    claim against the debtor that arose at the time of or before the order
    for relief concerning the debtor").
    Neither the Combined Fund nor the 1992 Plan were capable of
    being anyone's creditor until at least February 1, 1993, the earliest
    date on which the trusts could have been entitled to collect their first
    premiums. See note 10, supra; 
    26 U.S.C.A. § 9704
    (a) (West Supp.
    1997) ("Each assigned operator shall pay to the Combined Fund for
    each plan year beginning on or after February 1, 1993, an annual pre-
    mium[.]"). Consequently, the entirety of the Coal Act claims filed
    against Adventure by these two trusts must necessarily have arisen
    postpetition.11 We therefore affirm the district court's determination
    _________________________________________________________________
    ("[T]he term `eligible beneficiary' means an individual who . . . but for
    the enactment of this chapter, would be eligible to receive benefits from
    the 1950 UMWA Benefit Plan or the 1974 UMWA Benefit Plan, based
    upon age and service earned as of February 1, 1993[.]") (West Supp.
    1997); In re CF & I Fabricators of Utah, Inc. , 
    169 B.R. 984
    , 987 (D.
    Utah 1994) ("[S]ection 9702 of the Coal Act establishes the Combined
    Fund and merges the UMWA 1950 and 1974 Benefit Plans into the
    Combined Fund effective February 1, 1993. . . .[S]ection 9712 of the
    Coal Act establishes the 1992 Benefit Plan, which also became effective
    on February 1, 1993.").
    11 We speculated in Leckie that a debtor's liability for future Coal Act
    premiums may attach prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition, invit-
    ing the conclusion that a trust's entitlement to such premiums constitutes
    a prepetition claim. 
    99 F.3d at
    580-81 & n.9; In re Westmoreland Coal
    Co., 
    213 B.R. 1
    , 12 (Bankr. D. Colo. 1997) ("[T]he Fourth Circuit [in
    Leckie] concluded that Coal Act obligations fell within the bankruptcy
    definition of a claim and characterized future premium obligations under
    § 9712 as unmatured and contingent rights[.]"). In Leckie, however, none
    of the eight debtors filed for bankruptcy prior to February 1, 1993, the
    date that the trusts' creditor status was effectively established. See 
    99 F.3d at
    577 n.3, 578 n.6 (first petition filed on April 16, 1993).
    16
    that those claims be accorded administrative expense priority as taxes
    incurred by the estates.12
    IV.
    The final matter on appeal involves the Pension Trust claims, the
    lion's share of which the district court deemed ineligible for priority
    status as having initially accrued prior to the filing of the bankruptcy
    petitions. The Funds assert that the district court's ruling was in error,
    relying primarily on 
    11 U.S.C. §§ 1113
     and 1114, enacted by Con-
    gress during the 1980s in response to a perceived threat to labor sta-
    bility and to retiree health benefits posed by the bankruptcy
    reorganization of numerous large employers.
    A.
    Section 1114 simply has no application to the claims of the Pension
    Trusts. Although it commands that the trustee or debtor-in-possession
    pay "any" retiree benefits as an administrative expense of the bank-
    ruptcy estate, see § 1114(e) and note 12 supra, the term "retiree bene-
    fits" is limited to
    _________________________________________________________________
    12 The Funds have argued alternatively that the Coal Act claims should
    be accorded first priority status by virtue of 
    11 U.S.C. § 1114
    (e), which
    provides, in pertinent part:
    (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of this title, the
    debtor in possession, or the trustee . . . shall timely pay and shall
    not modify any retiree benefits, except[by court order after
    notice and a hearing, or as the parties may agree]. . . .
    (2) Any payment for retiree benefits required to be made
    before a plan confirmed under section 1129 of this title is effec-
    tive has the status of an allowed administrative expense as pro-
    vided in section 503 of this title.
    (emphases supplied). The trustee contends (and the district court held)
    that § 1114(e) applies only to benefit payments due after the filing of the
    bankruptcy petition. The Funds respond forcefully that the word "any" in
    paragraphs (1) and (2) encompasses both pre- and postpetition pay-
    ments. Inasmuch as we have already decided that all of the Coal Act
    claims arose postpetition, we leave for another day the task of ascertain-
    ing the scope of § 1114(e).
    17
    payments to any entity or person for the purpose of provid-
    ing or reimbursing payments for retired employees and their
    spouses and dependents, for medical, surgical, or hospital
    care benefits, or benefits in the event of sickness, accident,
    disability, or death under any plan, fund, or program . . .
    maintained or established in whole or in part by the debtor
    prior to filing a petition commencing a case under this title.
    
    11 U.S.C.A. § 1114
    (a) (West 1993) (emphasis supplied). True to their
    designations, the Pension Trusts administer only pension benefits for
    retired coal miners. None of their claims are for the types of benefits
    enumerated in § 1114(a).
    B.
    1.
    Section 1113, by contrast, affects the treatment of pension benefits
    in bankruptcy to the extent that those benefits exist pursuant to a col-
    lective bargaining agreement. The statute provides that a Chapter 11
    debtor (or trustee) may reject a collective bargaining agreement "only
    in accordance with the provisions of this section." 
    11 U.S.C.A. § 1113
    (a) (West 1993).13 The whole of the agreement is protected, as
    are its components: "No provision of this title shall be construed to
    permit a trustee to unilaterally terminate or alter any provisions of a
    collective bargaining agreement prior to compliance with the provi-
    sions of this section." § 1113(f).
    _________________________________________________________________
    13 If the debtor believes that its obligations under a collective bargain-
    ing agreement would inhibit its effective reorganization, it must first
    make a good-faith effort to negotiate a modification of the contract with
    its employees' authorized representative. § 1113(b). In the event of an
    impasse, the bankruptcy court may, after notice and a hearing, permit the
    debtor to reject the collective bargaining agreement only if (1) the debt-
    or's proposed modifications are "necessary to permit the reorganization
    of the debtor and assures that all creditors, the debtor and all of the
    affected parties are treated fairly and equitably"; (2) the employees'
    authorized representative has, without good cause, refused to accept the
    debtor's proposal; and (3) the balance of the equities clearly favors
    rejection of the collective bargaining agreement.§ 1113(c).
    18
    The parties acknowledge that, during the course of its attempted
    reorganization, Adventure never sought to reject or modify its labor
    agreement with the UMWA in accordance with § 1113; it merely con-
    tinued to breach its contractual obligation to pay the premiums due
    the Pension Trusts. The Funds maintain that Adventure's breach, in
    essence, unilaterally altered the pension contribution provision of the
    1988 NBCWA, in contravention of § 1113(f). According to the
    Funds, the only means of giving full force and effect to the statute is
    to compensate the Pension Trusts for the breach by granting all of
    their claims for unpaid premiums priority in distribution from the
    bankruptcy estates.
    The Funds' position finds some support in the holding of In re Uni-
    met Corp., 
    842 F.2d 879
    , 884 (6th Cir. 1988). In that case, the court
    of appeals opined that § 1113(f)'s "unequivocal" prohibition against
    the modification of collective bargaining agreements means that a
    debtor in Chapter 11 "cannot escape its obligations in [that] regard."
    Id. Unimet was therefore ordered to continue paying health and life
    insurance premiums on behalf of its retirees, pursuant to its prepeti-
    tion agreement with the steelworkers' union.
    We agree that the language employed by Congress in§ 1113 is
    unequivocal, insofar as it goes. It plainly imposes a legal duty on the
    debtor to honor the terms of a collective bargaining agreement, at
    least until that agreement is properly rejected. By implication, the
    statute creates a claim on behalf of the debtor's employees in the
    event that the debtor fails to comply with the law.
    Section 1113, however, offers no advice as to how this new cate-
    gory of claims should be treated vis a vis other categories competing
    for payment. The statute's silence stands in stark contrast to § 1114,
    see Section IV-A supra, which clearly states that "[a]ny payment for
    retiree benefits required to be made before a plan confirmed under
    section 1129 of this title is effective has the status of an allowed
    administrative expense[.]" 
    11 U.S.C.A. § 1114
    (e)(2) (West 1993).
    The Unimet court explicitly declined to decide whether benefit pre-
    miums payable under § 1113 are administrative expenses, deeming
    resolution of the issue immaterial to its conclusion that the premiums
    had to be paid. 
    842 F.2d at 884
    . To the extent that the Sixth Circuit's
    19
    rationale has been followed by the lower courts, a so-called "superpri-
    ority" has attached to claims within the purview of § 1113. E.g.,
    Eagle, Inc. v. Local No. 537 of United Ass'n of Journeymen and
    Apprentices of Plumbing and Pipe Fitting Indus. of United States and
    Canada, AFL-CIO, 
    198 B.R. 637
    , 638-39 (D. Mass. 1996).
    The obvious difficulty with the approach taken in Unimet and its
    progeny is that it engenders disharmony between§ 1113 and the care-
    fully ordered hierarchy of priorities embodied in§ 507. "Section 507
    is intended to be the exclusive list of priorities in bankruptcy. Pri-
    orities are to be fixed by Congress. Courts are not free to fashion their
    own rules of superpriorities or subpriorities within any given pri-
    ority class." 3 LAWRENCE P. KINGET AL., COLLIER ON BANKRUPTCY
    ¶ 507.02[2] (15th ed. 1996), cited in In re Ionosphere Clubs, Inc., 
    22 F.3d 403
    , 408 (2d Cir. 1994) (Ionosphere II).
    The Second and Third Circuits have both observed that, on those
    infrequent occasions where Congress has intended to supersede the
    general priority scheme set forth in § 507, it has done so explicitly.
    See Ionosphere II at 408 (citing § 1114(e)(2)'s allowance of claims
    for retiree benefits as administrative expenses); In re Roth American,
    Inc., 
    975 F.2d 949
    , 956 (3d Cir. 1992) (citing§ 364(c)(1)'s authoriza-
    tion for the bankruptcy court to accord "priority over any or all
    administrative expenses of the kind specified in section 503(b) or
    507(b) of this title" to credit obtained or debt incurred for the purpose
    of operating the debtor's business). As we have noted, explicit
    instruction from Congress concerning the priority of claims under
    § 1113 is conspicuously absent from the statute. "[T]here is no indica-
    tion either from the language or the legislative history of section 1113
    that Congress intended to address the priority to be given claims
    based on a collective bargaining agreement." Roth American at 956.
    We believe that, to the extent possible, Sections 507 and 1113 must
    be construed harmoniously. It is imperative to the orderly administra-
    tion of the bankruptcy process that § 507 remains, unless otherwise
    clearly specified by Congress, the final word on the priorities of com-
    peting claims. We can faithfully adhere to that principle in this case
    without doing violence to the legislative purpose inherent in § 1113:
    Section 507 only establishes the priority of [§ 1113]
    claims[;] it does not affect the underlying obligation . . . .
    20
    Judicial ordering of benefit claims pursuant to§ 507 is not
    equivalent to employer avoidance of obligations under a col-
    lective bargaining agreement. The collective bargaining
    agreement is respected, but the financial obligations issuing
    from it are accorded priority consistent with the Bankruptcy
    Code.
    Ionosphere II at 407 (citation and quotation marks omitted); see Roth
    American at 957 ("The congressional goal embodied in section 1113
    to give special consideration to a collective bargaining agreement and
    encourage the debtor and the union to reach a mutually acceptable
    agreement . . . can be satisfied without interfering with the previously
    established statutory priorities.").
    2.
    We conclude that a bankruptcy claim arising from the breach of a
    collective bargaining agreement may be accorded priority status only
    insofar as it fits into one of the categories singled out for preferential
    treatment in § 507. Fortunately for the Funds, the claims of the Pen-
    sion Trusts are the proverbial round peg.
    i.
    We begin with the unremarkable premise that unexpired collective
    bargaining agreements are executory contracts. NLRB v. Bildisco &
    Bildisco, 
    465 U.S. 513
    , 521-22 (1984).14 Their treatment in bank-
    ruptcy is, therefore, governed generally by 
    11 U.S.C. § 365
    , pertain-
    ing to executory contracts and unexpired leases entered into by the
    debtor prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition. 
    Id. at 522-23
    .
    _________________________________________________________________
    14 Upon examining the legislative history of the relevant portion of the
    Bankruptcy Code, the Supreme Court ascertained that Congress intended
    the term "executory contract" to describe those contracts "on which per-
    formance is due to some extent on both sides." Bildisco at 522 n.6 (quot-
    ing H.R.Rep. No. 95-595, at 347 (1977), reprinted in 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N.
    5963, 6303). Collective bargaining agreements typically impose recipro-
    cal obligations on the employer and the union, on which performance is
    due at all times for the duration of the contract.
    21
    In Bildisco, the Supreme Court held that a debtor attempting a
    Chapter 11 reorganization may reject a collective bargaining agree-
    ment that "burdens the estate," provided that"after careful scrutiny"
    the equities balance in favor of rejection. 
    Id. at 525-26
    ; see 
    11 U.S.C. § 365
    (a) (stating that the trustee "may assume or reject any executory
    contract or unexpired lease of the debtor"). It was precisely this hold-
    ing that inspired Congress's almost immediate enactment of § 1113
    "to preclude employers from using bankruptcy law as an offensive
    weapon in labor relations by going into bankruptcy and unilaterally
    rejecting or modifying the extant collective bargaining agreement (or
    exerting leverage at the bargaining table by threatening to do so)."
    Roth American at 956 (citation omitted).
    However, in erecting § 1113's substantive and procedural obstacles
    to the unilateral rejection of collective bargaining agreements, Con-
    gress did not indicate that it intended to otherwise restrict the general
    application of § 365 to those agreements. Section 1113 "governs only
    the conditions under which a debtor may modify or reject a collective
    bargaining agreement[.]" Id. (quoting In re Ohio Corrugating Co.,
    
    115 B.R. 572
    , 578 (Bankr. N.D. Ohio 1990), rev'd ,15 United Steel-
    workers of America, AFL-CIO v. Ohio Corrugating Co. , No.
    4:90CV0810, 
    1991 WL 213850
     (N.D. Ohio Jan. 3, 1991)).
    Thus, § 365 continues to apply to collective bargaining agreements,
    except where such an application would create an irreconcilable con-
    flict with § 1113. Mass. Air Conditioning & Heating Corp. v. McCoy,
    
    196 B.R. 659
    , 663 (D. Mass. 1996) ("Section 1113 is designed to pro-
    vide additional procedural requirements for rejection or modification
    of collective bargaining agreements, and only to that degree super-
    sedes and supplements the provisions in § 365.") (citing Norfolk and
    Western Ry. Co. v. American Train Dispatchers Ass'n , 
    499 U.S. 117
    ,
    136 n.2 (1991) (Stevens, J., dissenting)). The essential character of
    collective bargaining agreements as executory contracts, made plain
    in Bildisco, was left undisturbed by Congress.
    _________________________________________________________________
    15 The bankruptcy court's denial of priority status to the union's claims
    for wages and benefits in Ohio Corrugating was summarily reversed by
    the district court as inconsistent with the Sixth Circuit's interpretation of
    § 1113 in Unimet.
    22
    ii.
    The collective bargaining agreement between the UMWA and
    Adventure was assumed in bankruptcy as the result of the latter's fail-
    ure to reject it in accordance with § 1113. Roth American at 957.
    Where the debtor-in-possession assumes an executory contract, "it
    assumes the contract cum onere[.]"Bildisco at 531 (citation omitted).16
    That the obligations of an executory contract be accepted along with
    its benefits is made plain by the Bankruptcy Code's requirement that,
    as conditions of the contract's assumption, the debtor cure any exist-
    ing default and compensate all non-debtor parties for actual pecuniary
    losses that have resulted therefrom. See§ 365(b)(1).
    Upon assumption of the contract, "the expenses and liabilities
    incurred may be treated as administrative expenses, which are
    afforded the highest priority on the debtor's estate." Bildisco at 532;
    In re Stewart Foods, Inc., 
    64 F.3d 141
    , 145 (4th Cir. 1995).17 There
    can be no doubt, of course, that the statutory duty to cure any existing
    default is a "liability" incurred by the debtor by virtue of its assump-
    tion in bankruptcy of an executory contract.
    Hence, when Adventure assumed the collective bargaining agree-
    ment, it undertook a legal obligation to cure its existing defaults under
    that agreement, including the arrears to the Pension Trusts. Adven-
    ture's failure to comply with its legal obligation gave rise, under
    Bildisco and Stewart Foods, to an administrative expense claim on
    behalf of the Pension Trusts for the entirety of the arrearage. In effect,
    Adventure's postpetition assumption of its executory labor contract
    with the UMWA transformed the prepetition claims of the Pension
    _________________________________________________________________
    16 "What is taken cum onere is taken subject to an existing burden or
    charge." BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 342 (5th ed. 1979).
    17 If the contract is instead rejected, the resulting damages (including
    any prepetition breach) constitute general, unsecured claims against the
    estate. Bildisco at 531; see Stewart Foods at 144-45 ("[R]egardless of the
    nature of the contract, if at the time of the bankruptcy filing the debtor
    has an obligation under the contract to pay money to the non-debtor
    party, that obligation is handled as a pre-petition claim in the bankruptcy
    proceedings.").
    23
    Trusts, once not cured, into new claims arising postpetition. In re
    Mushroom Transp. Co., Inc., 
    78 B.R. 754
    , 759 (Bankr. E.D. Pa. 1987).18
    We conclude that the district court erred as a matter of law by
    declining to accord administrative expense priority to the Pension
    Trust claims insofar as the arrearage they represent initially accrued
    prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petitions. We therefore reverse its
    grant of summary judgment to Adventure as to those claims.
    V.
    We affirm the district court's orders of March 8, 1996, and June
    26, 1996, granting summary judgment to the Funds regarding the pri-
    ority classification of the Coal Act claims. We reverse the district
    court's order of March 8, 1996, to the extent that it granted summary
    judgment to Adventure regarding the priority classification of the
    Pension Trust claims. We remand the matter to the district court with
    _________________________________________________________________
    18 We tread no new ground in holding that prepetition defaults of exec-
    utory contracts and leases assumed in bankruptcy, left uncured, consti-
    tute postpetition administrative expenses of the estate. A number of
    learned colleagues and commentators have blazed that trail before us.
    See, e.g., LJC Corp. v. Boyle, 
    768 F.2d 1489
    , 1494 n.6 (D.C. Cir. 1985);
    Mass. Air Conditioning & Heating 
    196 B.R. at 663
    ; In re Moline Corp.,
    
    144 B.R. 75
    , 79 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 1992); In re French, 
    131 B.R. 138
    , 141
    (Bankr. E.D. Mo. 1991); In re Leon's Casuals Co., Inc., 
    122 B.R. 768
    ,
    771 (Bankr. S.D. Ala. 1990); In re Monroe Well Serv., Inc., 
    83 B.R. 317
    ,
    321 (Bankr. E.D. Pa. 1988); Mushroom, 
    78 B.R. at 759
    ; 2 LAWRENCE P.
    KING ET AL., COLLIER ON BANKRUPTCY ¶ 365.08[1] (15th ed. 1996) ("[A]
    trustee must proceed cautiously in electing whether to assume or reject
    [an executory contract] since an assumption will have the effect of mak-
    ing the expenses and liabilities incurred expenses of administration.");
    Jesse M. Fried, Executory Contracts and Performance Decisions in
    Bankruptcy, 46 DUKE L.J. 517, 525 (1996):
    If the trustee "assumes" the [executory] contract, Section 365
    binds the bankruptcy estate to the contract, permitting the estate
    to seek performance from the other party under the contract's
    original terms. [O]bligations in connection with assumed con-
    tracts . . . are treated as postpetition administration claims. . . .
    Thus, the effect of assumption is that the estate acquires all of
    the debtor's rights and obligations under the contract.
    24
    instructions to enter summary judgment for the Funds as to the Pen-
    sion Trust claims, according them administrative expense priority.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART,
    AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS
    25
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 96-1557

Citation Numbers: 137 F.3d 786

Filed Date: 2/27/1998

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/13/2023

Authorities (24)

In Re Leon's Casuals Co., Inc. , 122 B.R. 768 ( 1990 )

in-re-ionosphere-clubs-inc-eastern-air-lines-inc-bar-harbor-airways , 22 F.3d 403 ( 1994 )

in-re-stewart-foods-inc-formerly-known-as-stewart-sandwiches , 64 F.3d 141 ( 1995 )

Joy B. Patten, Administrator of the Estate of Marjory L. ... , 116 F.3d 1029 ( 1997 )

In Re Roth American, Inc., Debtor. Teamsters Local Union No.... , 975 F.2d 949 ( 1992 )

in-re-chateaugay-corporation-reomar-inc-ltv-corporation-debtors-ltv , 53 F.3d 478 ( 1995 )

In Re Westmoreland Coal Co. , 213 B.R. 1 ( 1997 )

Ljc Corporation v. John J. Boyle , 768 F.2d 1489 ( 1985 )

In Re Unimet Corporation, Debtor. United Steelworkers of ... , 842 F.2d 879 ( 1988 )

United States v. City of Huntington, West Virginia , 999 F.2d 71 ( 1993 )

New Neighborhoods, Inc. v. West Virginia Workers' ... , 886 F.2d 714 ( 1989 )

in-re-lorber-industries-of-california-inc-a-california-corporation , 675 F.2d 1062 ( 1982 )

in-re-leckie-smokeless-coal-company-new-river-mineral-resources-company , 99 F.3d 573 ( 1996 )

In Re Moline Corp. , 144 B.R. 75 ( 1992 )

In Re Monroe Well Service, Inc. , 83 B.R. 317 ( 1988 )

Eagle, Inc. v. LOCAL NO. 537 OF UNITED ASS'N , 198 B.R. 637 ( 1996 )

In Re French , 131 B.R. 138 ( 1991 )

In Re Ohio Corrugating Co. , 115 B.R. 572 ( 1990 )

Mass. Air Conditioning & Heating Corp. v. McCoy , 196 B.R. 659 ( 1996 )

In Re Mushroom Transp. Co., Inc. , 78 B.R. 754 ( 1987 )

View All Authorities »