Fallon Family, L.P. v. Goodrich Petroleum Corp. (In Re Goodrich Petroleum Corp.) ( 2018 )


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  •      Case: 17-20278    Document: 00514531428    Page: 1   Date Filed: 06/27/2018
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT     United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    No. 17-20278                        June 27, 2018
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    In the Matter of: GOODRICH PETROLEUM CORPORATION; GOODRICH
    PETROLEUM COMPANY, L.L.C.,
    Debtors
    __________________________
    FALLON FAMILY, L.P.,
    Appellant
    v.
    GOODRICH PETROLEUM CORPORATION; GOODRICH PETROLEUM
    COMPANY, L.L.C.,
    Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    Before DAVIS, JONES, and HIGGINSON, Circuit Judges.
    W. EUGENE DAVIS, Circuit Judge:
    In 2014, appellant Fallon Family, L.P. (the “Fallon Family”), as part of a
    settlement agreement with appellees Goodrich Petroleum Corporation and
    Goodrich Petroleum Company, L.L.C. (collectively, “Goodrich”), executed a
    ratification of a previously disputed mineral lease in favor of Goodrich. In
    March 2016, Goodrich filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceeding. Although the
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    No. 17-20278
    settlement agreement required Goodrich to make substantial cash payments
    over time to the Fallon Family, the recorded ratification of the lease did not
    reflect this fact but only indicated that good and sufficient consideration had
    been paid for the ratification. The Fallon Family argued that because the
    bankrupt Goodrich failed to make payments under the promissory note made
    part of the settlement agreement, the Fallon Family had the right to dissolve
    the settlement agreement on grounds of non-payment, thus divesting Goodrich
    of its interest in the lease. We agree with the bankruptcy court that when
    Goodrich filed for bankruptcy, the debtor-in-possession became vested under
    11 U.S.C. § 544(a) with all the rights and powers of a bona fide purchaser of
    the real property rights of Goodrich, including the ratified lease. The lease as
    ratified may not be dissolved for nonpayment of the obligations in the
    settlement agreement because the public record reflects that consideration had
    been fully paid, and a third party was not placed on notice of the remaining
    payments. We therefore AFFIRM.
    I.
    On September 8, 1954, the Fallon Family’s predecessor-in-interest, Silas
    F. Talbert, executed a mineral rights lease (the “Lease”) covering a 487-acre
    tract of land in Caddo and DeSoto Parishes, Louisiana (the “Property”). The
    Lease provided for a five-year primary term and a secondary term to continue
    “as long thereafter as oil, gas or other mineral is produced” on the Property.
    The Lease was properly recorded in the conveyance records of both parishes.
    On February 28, 2012, the Fallon Family petitioned the 42nd Judicial
    District Court in DeSoto Parish to terminate the Lease and to assess damages
    and attorney’s fees against Goodrich and other parties. Specifically, the Fallon
    Family alleged that Goodrich had ceased continuous operations on three units
    of the Property, in violation of the terms of the Lease. On October 2, 2014, the
    Fallon Family recorded two Notices of Pendency of Action (collectively, the “Lis
    2
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    Pendens”) in the conveyance records of Caddo and DeSoto Parishes, which
    attached the Lease and evidenced the Fallon Family’s suit to terminate the
    Lease. 1 On October 6, 2014, the eve of trial, the Fallon Family agreed with
    Goodrich and the other defendants to resolve all controversies relating to the
    Lease.
    The settlement was confirmed in a written agreement (the “Settlement
    Agreement”) between the Fallon Family, Goodrich, and other defendants. The
    Settlement Agreement spelled out the terms of the parties’ October 15, 2014
    compromise. In the Settlement Agreement, the Fallon Family agreed to ratify
    the Lease and to release its claims against Goodrich in consideration for
    Goodrich’s paying $650,000 within ten business days of the Settlement
    Agreement and executing a promissory note (the “Promissory Note”) in the
    amount of $1,000,000. The Promissory Note was to be paid in $100,000 bi-
    annual installments, with the first installment due on October 15, 2015. The
    $650,000 was wired to the Fallon Family and the Promissory Note duly
    delivered. The Amendment and Ratification of Oil, Gas and Mineral Lease
    (the “Lease Ratification”) was recorded in the conveyance records of both Caddo
    and DeSoto parishes, with an effective date of October 15, 2014. The recorded
    Lease Ratification, in relevant part, reads:
    NOW, THEREFORE, for the promises and covenants exchanged
    below, and other good and valuable consideration exchanged by
    the Parties on or near this date, the receipt and sufficiency of
    which is hereby acknowledged, the Parties agree [to the listed
    promises and covenants].
    The stipulated promises and covenants in the Lease Ratification are: (1)
    that except as to land released by prior agreement, the Lease is “hereby
    1A notice of lis pendens alerts a third party to a suit “affecting the title to, or asserting
    a mortgage or privilege on, immovable property.” LA. CODE CIV. PRO. ANN. art. 3751. Under
    Louisiana law, it must be recorded. 
    Id. 3 Case:
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    affirmed and ratified in its entirety, and remains in full force and effect;” (2)
    that the Lease “never ceased to be in full force and effect;” (3) that the Lease is
    severed by unit for maintenance; and (4) that an additional royalty clause is
    added to the Lease.
    On October 15, 2015, Goodrich paid the first $100,000 installment on the
    Promissory Note; when the second installment came due on April 15, 2016,
    Goodrich failed to make the payment, leaving a $900,000 outstanding balance
    on the Promissory Note.      On the same day, it filed voluntary chapter 11
    bankruptcy proceedings in the Southern District of Texas bankruptcy court.
    During the course of bankruptcy proceedings, the Fallon Family filed an
    emergency motion seeking to compel assumption or rejection of the Settlement
    Agreement as an 11 U.S.C. § 365 executory contract. Had the Fallon Family
    succeeded in this argument, Goodrich would have been obligated either to
    perform fully the terms of the Settlement Agreement and thus pay the
    remainder of the debt or to reject the Settlement Agreement and thus
    relinquish any interest in the Lease Ratification. Alternatively, the Fallon
    Family sought to dissolve the Settlement Agreement in its entirety, putting
    both parties back in their pre-Settlement Agreement positions and thereby
    stripping Goodrich of its interest in the Lease. Goodrich, in opposition, argued
    that 11 U.S.C. § 544(a) allowed it to rely, as a bona fide purchaser, on
    representations in the recorded Lease Ratification that full consideration had
    been paid thereby preventing dissolution.
    On July 26, 2016, following the receipt of Goodrich’s objection and a
    motion hearing, the bankruptcy court denied the Fallon Family’s motion,
    finding that, though the Promissory Note was integrated into the Settlement
    Agreement:    (1) the Settlement Agreement was not an executory contract
    under 11 U.S.C. § 365 that Goodrich could be compelled to assume or reject;
    4
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    and (2) the Fallon Family’s dissolution rights were not effective as to Goodrich
    pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 544. 2 On appeal, the district court affirmed.
    The Fallon Family timely lodged this appeal.
    II.
    We exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(d)(1). “We review
    the decision of a district court, sitting as an appellate court, by applying the
    same standards of review to the bankruptcy court’s findings of fact and
    conclusions of law as applied by the district court.” 3 Thus, we review the
    bankruptcy court’s findings of fact for clear error and its legal conclusions de
    novo. 4
    III.
    Central to this case is the interplay between 11 U.S.C. § 544(a),
    commonly referred to as the “strong arm” provision of the Bankruptcy Code,
    and the Louisiana Public Records Doctrine, Louisiana Civil Code article 3338.
    As a threshold matter, the Fallon Family argues that 11 U.S.C. § 544(a) only
    permits a debtor-in-possession (1) to avoid the transfer of property of the
    debtor; or (2) to avoid the obligations incurred by the debtor. In other words,
    the Fallon Family argues that these are the only strong-arm abilities Goodrich
    has to keep the bankruptcy estate intact.
    These powers, the Fallon Family argues, are irrelevant in determining
    whether the Fallon Family can dissolve the Settlement Agreement because
    dissolution is a separate Louisiana statutory right. We agree with Goodrich
    that the Fallon Family’s reading of 11 U.S.C. § 544(a) is much too narrow.
    2 The 11 U.S.C. § 365 executory contract issue was not urged on appeal, and we do not
    address it here.
    3 In re Entringer Bakeries, Inc., 
    548 F.3d 344
    , 348 (5th Cir. 2008) (quotation marks
    omitted).
    4 In re Gerhardt, 
    348 F.3d 89
    , 91 (5th Cir. 2003).
    5
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    Because Goodrich, as debtor-in-possession, “occupies the shoes of a
    trustee in every way” under the Bankruptcy Code, 5 Goodrich’s abilities as
    debtor-in-possession are defined by 11 U.S.C. § 544(a). 6 The relevant text of
    11 U.S.C. § 544(a) reads as follows:
    (a) The trustee shall have, as of the commencement of the
    case, and without regard to any knowledge of the trustee or of any
    creditor, the rights and powers of, or may avoid any transfer of
    property of the debtor or any obligation incurred by the debtor that
    is voidable by—
    ...
    (3) a bona fide purchaser of real property, other than
    fixtures, from the debtor, against whom applicable law
    permits such transfer to be perfected, that obtains the status
    of a bona fide purchaser and has perfected such transfer at
    the time of the commencement of the case, whether or not
    such a purchaser exists. 7
    Section 544(a) does not merely bestow upon a debtor-in-possession the
    ability to avoid either the transfer of a debtor’s property or its obligations;
    instead, a debtor-in-possession is endowed with “the rights and powers” of,
    inter alia, a “bona fide purchaser of real property.” 8 In other words, the
    Bankruptcy Code creates a legal fiction affording a debtor-in-possession the
    5  In re Hughes, 
    704 F.2d 820
    , 822 (5th Cir. 1983) (citing 11 U.S.C. § 1107(a)).
    The debtor, though left in possession by the judge, does not operate the
    business as it did before the filing of the petition, unfettered and without
    restraint. Rather, a debtor in possession holds its powers in trust for the
    benefit of creditors.
    
    Id. (alterations and
    quotation marks omitted).
    6 See generally 11 U.S.C. § 544(a).
    7 
    Id. In advancing
    its argument, the Fallon Family briefly mentions 11 U.S.C.
    § 544(a)(1), which endows a trustee with the powers of a judicial lien creditor, but neither
    Goodrich nor the Fallon Family urge any argument regarding the import of judicial lien
    creditor status.
    8 See 
    id. § 544(a)(3)
    (emphasis added). “Statutory construction . . . begins with the
    plain language of the statute.” In re Dale, 
    582 F.3d 568
    , 573 (5th Cir. 2009).
    6
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    abilities it would have as a bona fide purchaser of the debtor’s interests in
    immovable property 9 at the time the bankruptcy is filed. 10
    IV.
    “While the Bankruptcy Code creates the status of a hypothetical bona
    fide purchaser, state law defines that status.” 11 The Fallon Family argues that
    debtors-in-possession and bona fide purchasers are not third persons “under
    Louisiana’s law of registry with respect to the ratification of a mineral lease
    pursuant to a settlement agreement,” and thus that Goodrich remains
    responsible for its obligations under the unrecorded terms of the Settlement
    Agreement. We agree with Goodrich that this argument is foreclosed by our
    decision in In re Zedda, which concluded that 11 U.S.C. § 544(a)(3) bona fide
    purchasers are third persons under the Louisiana Public Records Doctrine. 12
    The Louisiana Public Records Doctrine requires certain types of
    instruments affecting immovables to be filed in the public records in order to
    be effective against third persons. 13 It states:
    9
    In civil law systems things are divided into movables and immovables. This
    division was known in Roman law and other ancient legal systems and has
    been adopted in modern civil codes. In common law jurisdictions, property is
    divided into personal property and real property, but these terms may be taken
    as roughly equivalent to the civilian notions of movables and immovables.
    A. N. YIANNOPOULOS, 2 LA. CIV. L. TREATISE, PROPERTY § 7:1 (5th ed. 2017) (footnotes
    omitted).
    10 11 U.S.C. § 544(a)(3).
    11 In re Hamilton, 
    125 F.3d 292
    , 298 (5th Cir. 1997).
    12 See 
    103 F.3d 1195
    , 1201–02 (5th Cir. 1997).
    13
    The contours of the doctrine have not been fully defined, but its general
    outlines are settled. The three basic tenets of the doctrine are: an acquirer of
    immovable property is bound by recorded instruments affecting the property;
    any personal knowledge that the acquirer may have outside the records is
    immaterial; and a bona fide purchaser for value is entitled to rely on the
    absence from the public records of instruments that must be recorded.
    A. N. YIANNOPOULOS, 4 LA. CIV. L. TREATISE, PREDIAL SERVITUDES § 6:22 (4th ed. 2017).
    7
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    The rights and obligations established or created by the following
    written instruments are without effect as to a third person unless
    the instrument is registered by recording it in the appropriate
    mortgage or conveyance records pursuant to the provisions of this
    Title:
    (1) An instrument that transfers an immovable or
    establishes a real right in or over an immovable.
    (2) The lease of an immovable.
    (3) An option or right of first refusal, or a contract to buy,
    sell, or lease an immovable or to establish a real right in or
    over an immovable.
    (4) An instrument that modifies, terminates, or transfers the
    rights created or evidenced by the instruments described in
    Subparagraphs (1) through (3) of this Article. 14
    Louisiana Civil Code article 3343 defines a third person as one “who is
    not a party to or personally bound by an instrument.” 15 The article clarifies
    that, “[a] person who by contract assumes an obligation or is bound by contract
    to recognize a right is not a third person with respect to the obligation or right
    or to the instrument creating or establishing it.” 16
    In In re Zedda, a panel of this Court considered the intersection of the
    Louisiana Public Records Doctrine with 11 U.S.C. § 544(a) where the trustee
    of a bankruptcy estate claimed that certain property was part of, and could be
    administered by, the estate. 17 In its analysis, the Court found that, “[f]or
    purposes of Louisiana’s Public Records Doctrine, a creditor or a purchaser is a
    third person.” 18 Applying that doctrine to § 544(a), the Court concluded that it
    14   LA. CIV. CODE ANN. art. 3338.
    15   
    Id. art. 3343.
            16 
    Id. 17 103
    F.3d at 1200. The Louisiana provision the Court addressed there has changed
    slightly in form since the In re Zedda decision but has not changed in substance. Compare
    LA. REV. STAT. ANN. § 9:2721 (1996), with LA. CIV. CODE ANN. art. 3338.
    18 In re 
    Zedda, 103 F.3d at 1202
    .
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    was “clear” that a trustee was “a third person for purposes of the public records
    when he assume[d] the status of a hypothetical creditor or a bona fide
    purchaser as of the commencement of the case.” 19 This conclusion, the Court
    continued, was “supported by the Trustee’s correct assertion that he occupies
    the position of a third party who is entitled to rely on the public records.” 20 As
    noted above, Goodrich exercises the identical powers and duties as a trustee. 21
    In re Zedda, then, stands for the proposition that Goodrich, as a debtor-in-
    possession, is considered a third person acting as a bona fide purchaser for the
    purposes of the Louisiana Public Records Doctrine. 22
    The Fallon Family attempts to avoid the result reached in In re Zedda,
    contending that Article 128 of the Louisiana Mineral Code dictates that
    Goodrich, as an assignee of a mineral lease, “is fully and directly responsible
    for the performance of Goodrich’s prepetition obligations under the Settlement
    Agreement.”
    Article 128 provides:
    To the extent of the interest acquired, an assignee or sublessee
    acquires the rights and powers of the lessee and becomes
    responsible directly to the original lessor for performance of the
    lessee’s obligations. 23
    Article 128, on its face, defines the obligations of a sublessee or an assignee;
    because Goodrich is neither, Article 128 does not apply here. 24 It is true that
    19 
    Id. 20 Id.
    (emphasis added).
    21 See In re 
    Hughes, 704 F.2d at 822
    .
    22 See In re 
    Zedda, 103 F.3d at 1202
    .
    23 LA. REV. STAT. ANN. § 31:128.
    24 See 
    id. Consequently, the
    case submitted by the Fallon Family in oral argument,
    Singer v. Continental Illinois Energy Development Corp., has no relevance to the facts here.
    See 
    786 F.2d 647
    (5th Cir. 1986). Our facts would parallel those in Singer, if, before filing for
    bankruptcy, Goodrich had assigned its interest in the Lease Ratification to another party and
    then, after Goodrich’s filing, the Fallon Family had attempted to enforce the terms of the
    Settlement Agreement against that third party, which would have none of the 11 U.S.C.
    § 544(a)(3) protections and would not be a bona fide purchaser. See generally 
    id. As those
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    Goodrich, prior to initiating bankruptcy proceedings, was burdened by the
    responsibilities described in the Settlement Agreement. However, in donning
    the mantle of bona fide purchaser permitted by § 544(a)(3), Goodrich is a
    hypothetical purchaser of the Lease Ratification subject to the obligations
    detailed therein. 25
    The Fallon Family also argues that Louisiana Civil Code article 3343
    precludes third-person status for Goodrich. This argument fails as well. As
    described above, Article 3343 merely clarifies that third persons are not those
    who, “by contract assume[] an obligation or [are] bound by contract to recognize
    a right.” 26 Goodrich as debtor-in-possession is considered to be a separate
    entity from Goodrich as debtor. And, as a bona fide purchaser of the Lease
    Ratification, Goodrich has not contractually assumed obligations outside the
    recorded Lease Ratification. 27
    In addition, both the registry laws and the Louisiana Mineral Code
    recognize the existence and rights of a third person who may be held only to
    the terms of a mineral lease—or to the terms of a document modifying it—as
    circumstances vary significantly from today’s case, the Fallon Family’s reliance on Singer is
    misplaced. See 
    id. 25 See
    11 U.S.C. § 544(a)(3). Of note, Goodrich does not contest that the Fallon Family
    has a viable claim against the bankruptcy estate for the consideration outlined in the
    Settlement Agreement and, more specifically, the $900,000 debt outstanding on the
    Promissory Note. However, Goodrich considers this to be separate, unsecured debt.
    26 LA. CIV. CODE ANN. art. 3343 (emphasis added).
    27See 
    id. The cases
    the Fallon Family cites in its briefing are readily distinguishable.
    See Sonnier v. Conner, 
    998 So. 2d 344
    , 359 (La. Ct. App. 2008) (citing LA CIV. CODE ANN. art.
    961 and LA. CIV. CODE ANN. art. 3343) (standing for the proposition that heirs that have
    accepted succession are not innocent third persons as to the debts of an estate under
    Louisiana Civil Code article 3343 and the applicable law of succession); J& R Enters.-
    Shreveport, L.L.C. v. Sarr, 
    989 So. 2d 235
    , 241 (La. Ct. App. 2008) (standing for the
    straightforward precept of Louisiana Civil Code article 3343: that a party who assumes a
    lease is not a third person). The Fallon Family finally argues that because Louisiana law
    permits the use of memoranda and notices of lease, not all obligations between the parties
    need to be recorded in the public records. See LA. REV. STAT. ANN. § 9:2742. Unlike notices
    or memoranda of lease, however, the Lease Ratification does not purport to be an incomplete
    statement of the parties’ status.
    10
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    they are described in the conveyance record. 28 The Louisiana Public Records
    Doctrine explicitly directs that the lease of an immovable and any documents
    altering the interest in it must be recorded to be effective against a third
    person. 29 Further, Article 18 of the Mineral Code instructs that “[a]ll sales,
    contracts, and judgments affecting mineral rights are subject to the laws of
    registry.” 30 And, a mineral lease is one of the “basic” mineral rights under
    Louisiana law. 31 The fact that the immovable in this case is a mineral lease
    ratification, then, does not affect Goodrich’s status as a third person under the
    Louisiana Public Records Doctrine. 32           Whether dissolution is permissible
    notwithstanding the lack of notice to a third person is a separate question we
    discuss below.
    V.
    Having determined that Goodrich, as a debtor-in-possession, qualifies as
    a third person under the Louisiana Public Records Doctrine, we address the
    next question presented: May a party dissolve an agreement when it will
    disrupt an interest in immovable property protected by the Louisiana Public
    Records Doctrine?
    The Fallon Family argues that under Louisiana Civil Code article 3339,
    “a termination of rights that depends on the occurrence of a condition [such as
    breach of contract] need not be recorded to affect third parties,” and thus that
    the right of dissolution obtains even when recorded documents do not indicate
    that an immovable interest may be affected. 33 In support, the Fallon Family
    points to Article 3081 of the Louisiana Civil Code, which governs dissolution of
    28 See LA CIV. CODE ANN. art. 3338; LA. REV. STAT. ANN. § 31:18.
    29 LA. CIV. CODE ANN. art. 3338.
    30 LA. REV. STAT. ANN. § 31:18 (emphasis added).
    31 
    Id. § 31:16.
          32 See LA CIV. CODE ANN. art. 3338; LA. REV. STAT. ANN. § 31:18.
    33 See LA. CIV. CODE ANN. art. 3339.
    11
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    a compromise, to argue that the right to dissolution is effective against third
    persons regardless of recordation because the right to dissolve a contract
    “arises by operation of law.” 34 Goodrich responds that, because the recorded
    Lease Ratification represents that full consideration has been paid, the Fallon
    Family cannot dissolve the Settlement Agreement in order to divest Goodrich
    of its interest in the Lease.
    Under longstanding Louisiana legal principles, “[n]either fraud, nor
    want of consideration, nor secret equities between the parties, who have placed
    on the public records a title valid upon its face, can be urged against the bona
    fide purchaser for value, who has acted on the faith of such recorded title.” 35 A
    number of Louisiana state and federal cases analogous to today’s case have
    concluded that, where the conveyance record indicates that consideration has
    been paid in full, a third party is not susceptible to the remedy of dissolution,
    which would be available between the original contractual parties. 36                        In
    LeBlanc v. Bernard, the plaintiff sued the rehabilitator of an insurance
    company, seeking the dissolution of a sale of immovable property where the
    recorded conveyances showed the purchase price had been paid but, in fact, it
    was undisputed that the price had not been paid. 37 The Louisiana appellate
    court reasoned that “[t]he operation of the right of dissolution against a third
    party becomes inconsistent with the public records doctrine when . . . the
    34 See 
    id. art. 3081.
           35 Schwing Lumber & Shingle Co. v. Ark. Nat. Gas Co., 
    116 So. 851
    , 852 (La. 1928)
    (quoting Cole v. Richmond, 
    100 So. 418
    , 423 (La. 1924)); see also DIAN TOOLEY-KNOBLETT &
    DAVID GRUNING, 24 LA. CIV. TREATISE, SALES § 15:12 (2017).
    36 See e.g., LeBlanc v. Bernard, 
    554 So. 2d 1378
    , 1381 (La. Ct. App. 1989); cf. City Bank
    & Tr. Co. v. Caneco Constr., Inc., 
    341 So. 2d 1331
    , 1333 (La. Ct. App. 1976) (“[T]he record
    showed an authentic act of sale reciting that the full amount of the purchase price was paid
    in cash. Under these circumstances, the trial court did not err in excluding parol evidence
    varying the recital that the full amount of the purchase price was paid in cash . . . .”).
    37 
    LeBlanc, 554 So. 2d at 1379
    –81. A rehabilitator under the Louisiana Insurance
    Code acts as the trustee to a Louisiana bankruptcy estate. See generally LA. REV. STAT. ANN.
    § 22:2008.
    12
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    public records reflect that the [purchase] price [for an immovable
    right] has been paid.” 38 Thus, the court held that “the right of dissolution
    cannot lie in this case if defendant can rely on the public records.” 39
    In In re Leeward Operators, LLC, an analogous case in the bankruptcy
    context, two oil companies assigned a mineral lease to an oil well operator by
    letter agreement. 40 The assignment was recorded—without any mention of the
    letter agreement—in the parish conveyance records. 41 The operator failed to
    make the payment provided for in the agreement and subsequently filed for
    bankruptcy under Chapter 11. 42               During bankruptcy proceedings, the
    bankruptcy trustee sought to have the creditors’ privileges ranked, and the oil
    companies sought dissolution of the agreement assigning the lease and
    requiring consideration. 43       The bankruptcy court refused to dissolve the
    agreement, finding that, “if the public record shows that the purchase price
    was paid, the seller’s dissolution rights are not effective against third
    parties.” 44
    The Fallon Family here faces obstacles similar to those faced by the
    plaintiffs in LeBlanc and In re Leeward. Goodrich, as debtor, has not paid the
    Promissory Note; however, Goodrich, as debtor-in-possession, and thus a
    hypothetical bona fide purchaser of the Lease Ratification, may avoid the
    result of dissolution because the public record indicates that consideration has
    been fully paid. 45 The Fallon Family has not cited a single authority where
    38 
    LeBlanc, 554 So. 2d at 1381
    .
    39 
    Id. 40 No.
    09-50260, 
    2012 WL 1073173
    , at *1 (Bankr. W.D. La. Mar. 29, 2012).
    41 See 
    id. at *1,
    *4.
    42 
    Id. at *1.
           43 
    Id. at *1–2.
           44 
    Id. at *3
    (citing YIANNOPOULOS, 2 LA. CIV. L. TREATISE, PROPERTY § 233; 
    LeBlanc, 554 So. 2d at 1381
    ).
    45 See id.; 
    LeBlanc, 550 So. 2d at 1381
    . In fact, the Public Record doctrine might
    protect Goodrich from being stripped of the Lease Ratification even were the record silent as
    13
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    dissolution has been allowed where the defendant is a bona fide purchaser and
    the public record shows that the purchase price has been fully paid. 46
    Following long-standing Louisiana law, then, we conclude that because the
    Lease Ratification shows the purchase price has been paid, the Fallon Family
    cannot dissolve the Settlement Agreement. 47
    The Fallon Family protests that it is ambiguous here whether the
    purchase price was, indeed, paid. It argues that the record here militates in
    favor of a different result than that reached for example, in In re Leeward,
    because the language in the recorded assignment there showed that
    consideration had been paid “cash in hand,” whereas here the Lease
    Ratification recites that promises and covenants have been exchanged. This is
    not so.
    to the purchase price being paid. See In re D’Anna, 
    548 B.R. 155
    , 167–68 (E.D. La. 2016)
    (“Third persons are not allowed to rely on what is contained in the public records but can
    instead rely on the absence from the public record of those interests that are required to be
    recorded.” (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted)). However, Louisiana law
    generally appears to require positive affirmation that the purchase price was paid in the
    records where parties seek to maintain an interest in immovable property.                  See
    YIANNOPOULOS, supra note 9, PROPERTY § 9:33.
    46 The Fallon Family argues that Robertson v. Buoni, a Louisiana Supreme Court case,
    stands for the proposition that the right to dissolve an agreement is not dependent on the
    existence of a recorded security device. See 
    504 So. 2d 860
    (La. 1987). However, in that case,
    unlike today’s case, there was no third party present. See 
    id. at 863
    (Lemmon, J., concurring).
    The concurrence noted that “[w]hen a sale of immovable property has been recorded, the
    seller’s right to dissolution, as against a subsequent purchaser, may depend on whether the
    recorded original sale indicates that the price has or has not been paid.” 
    Id. The court
    in
    LeBlanc applied the concurrence’s reasoning, and it has been influential in persuasive
    secondary sources. See 
    LeBlanc, 554 So. 2d at 1380
    –81 (citing 
    Robertson, 504 So. 2d at 863
    (Lemmon, J., concurring)); TOOLEY-KNOBLETT, supra note 35, § 15:12 (citing 
    Robertson, 504 So. 2d at 863
    (Lemmon, J., concurring)).
    47 Indeed, the Louisiana Supreme Court, in 1928, applied this principle in the land
    exchange context, prohibiting the dissolution of a contract when the immovable property
    concerned had passed into the hands of a third party, and the recorded document showed
    that the parties had acknowledged the exchange to be complete. Schwing Lumber & Shingle
    
    Co., 116 So. at 851
    –52.
    14
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    No. 17-20278
    As explained above, the bankruptcy court in In re Leeward concluded
    that the creditor oil companies could not dissolve, to the trustee’s detriment, a
    letter agreement outlining the consideration to be paid for the recorded
    assignment of mineral leases when the public record showed that the purchase
    price had been paid. 48 The language in that recorded assignment read:
    NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the sum of One Hundred
    Dollars ($100), cash in hand paid, and of other good and valuable
    consideration, the receipt, adequacy and sufficiency of which are
    hereby acknowledged, PRIME OIL COMPANY, L.L.C., . . . does
    hereby convey, assign, sell, set-over and deliver unto LEEWARD
    OPERATORS, L.L.C., . . . 87.50% of the right, title and interest of
    [Prime] in and to [the] Leases . . . 49
    Contrary to the Fallon Family’s argument, this language strongly resembles
    that in its Lease Ratification, which reads, in part:
    NOW, THEREFORE, for the promises and covenants exchanged
    below, and other good and valuable consideration exchanged by
    the Parties on or near this date, the receipt and sufficiency of
    which is hereby acknowledged, the Parties agree [to the listed
    promises and covenants].
    The recorded assignment in In re Leeward, as the Lease Ratification here,
    specifically acknowledges “the receipt . . . and sufficiency” of the “valuable
    consideration” detailed by the documents. 50 The “promises and covenants” in
    the Lease Ratification here were “exchanged below,” by Goodrich and the
    Fallon Family “on or near” October 15, 2014, the effective date of the Lease
    Ratification.   Thus, a third person would understand that exchange was
    complete on the day the Lease Ratification was effective. Also, the Lease
    Ratification specified that the Lease had never ceased, so all outstanding
    48  In re Leeward, 
    2012 WL 1073173
    , at *3 (citing YIANNOPOULOS, 2 LA. CIV. L.
    TREATISE, PROPERTY § 233; 
    LeBlanc, 554 So. 2d at 1381
    ).
    49 
    Id. at *4.
          50 See 
    id. 15 Case:
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    No. 17-20278
    encumbrances upon the interest would appear to a third party to have been
    resolved. 51 Additionally, the Lease Ratification makes no reference whatever
    either to the Settlement Agreement or to the Note. The Fallon Family’s claim
    that consideration is insufficient is inconsistent with the recorded instrument
    and therefore impermissible under Louisiana Civil Code article 3342, which
    prohibits a party to a recorded instrument from later contradicting the
    instrument to the prejudice of a third person. 52 Because the language in the
    Lease Ratification represents to a third person that consideration had been
    fully paid, Goodrich is shielded from the effects of dissolution. 53
    VI.
    The Fallon Family offers two final arguments regarding the nature of
    the Settlement Agreement with which we summarily dispense. First, though
    the argument is not well developed in briefing, the Fallon Family argues that,
    because the Promissory Note and Lease Ratification are fully integrated into
    the Settlement Agreement, Goodrich may not use 11 U.S.C. § 544(a)(3) to treat
    the Lease Ratification as a bona fide third-party purchaser. Whether an
    agreement’s integration and the presence of integration clauses affect the
    ability of parties to the contract to point to parol evidence when contract
    disputes arise. 54 We find no authority, nor has the Fallon Family cited any,
    51 The bankruptcy court sums up the effect of the language as follows:
    If a hypothetical third party had examined the property records, the third
    party would have seen the Lis Pendens referencing the 1954 Lease, then a
    Lease Ratification which specifically indicated that all claims regarding the
    1954 Lease were released and waived. The Lease Ratification indicated
    further that consideration—analogous to the purchase price in Leeward—had
    been given and acknowledged as sufficient. The Fallon Family exercising their
    right to dissolve the Settlement Agreement based on a failure of consideration
    would contradict the recorded instrument acknowledging receipt and
    sufficiency of consideration. This is not allowable under Louisiana law.
    52 See LA. CIV. CODE. ANN. art. 3342.
    53 See, e.g., In re Leeward, 
    2012 WL 1073173
    , at *4.
    54 See Condrey v. SunTrust Bank of Ga., 
    429 F.3d 556
    , 564–67 (5th Cir. 2005).
    16
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    No. 17-20278
    suggesting that integration of the Promissory Note and Lease Ratification into
    the unrecorded Settlement Agreement would put a hypothetical bona fide
    purchaser on notice of the terms of the Settlement Agreement. It would not.
    The Fallon Family also argues that the Settlement Agreement cannot be
    “parsed into its components, so that Goodrich may retain the benefits and
    reject the burdens.” However, in the bankruptcy context, obligations agreed to
    in pre-petition non-executory contracts are often never met in full.                       The
    purpose of the Bankruptcy Plan is to meet these commitments as fully as
    possible while still granting Goodrich an opportunity to rebuild its business. 55
    Unfortunately, creditors often do not receive the full amount of their claims;
    however, this is a feature, not a flaw, of the design of the bankruptcy system.
    VII.
    For the reasons above, we AFFIRM the judgment of the bankruptcy
    court.
    See Stellwagen v. Clum, 
    245 U.S. 605
    , 617 (1918) (“The federal system of bankruptcy
    55
    is designed not only to distribute the property of the debtor . . . fairly and equally among his
    creditors, but as a main purpose of the act, intends to aid the unfortunate debtor by giving
    him a fresh start in life . . . .”).
    17