MEMORANDUM
RAMBO, District Judge.
United Artists Music & Record Groups, Inc. [hereinafter United Artists], Warner Electric Atlantic [hereinafter Warner], Keel Manufacturing, Inc. [hereinafter Keel], Atlantic Recording Corporation [hereinafter Atlantic] and Pickwick International, Inc. [hereinafter Pickwick] have appealed an order of the bankruptcy court which confirmed Record Club of America, Inc.'s [hereinafter RCOA] plan of arrangement. All the parties have brief the issues and no oral argument was necessary.
RCOA alleges that these appellants do not have standing to appeal, because they do not meet the definition of "a person aggrieved" as required by 11 U.S.C. § 67(c). 11 U.S.C. § 67(c) says:
A person aggrieved is broadly defined. The court in In re Capitano, 315 F.Supp. 105 (E.D.La.1970) said:
RCOA attacks the applicability of either the word "person" or the word "aggrieved" to each appellant.
In the case of United Artists, the debtor argues that United Artists no longer exists because it was merged into Capitol Records, Inc. on April 1, 1981. The legal argument is that if United Artists no longer exists, then it is not a person within section 67(c).
Bankruptcy Rule 725 for the most part incorporates Rule 25 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Rule 25(c) says:
RCOA argues that Keel is not a person, because the corporation was dissolved in 1975. Rule 25 cannot create substantive rights, so it is necessary to look to state law to determine whether a corporation may pursue litigation after dissolution. In re Covington Grain Co., 638 F.2d 1357, 1361 (5th Cir.1981). Keel is a New York corporation which was dissolved on October 6, 1975. Certificate of Dissolution, Exhibit I of the Affidavit of Sigmund Friedman. New York Business Corporation Statute section 1006 allows a dissolved corporation to continue litigation in which it is involved at time of dissolution. See Chicago Title and Trust Co. v. Wilcox Bldg. Corp., 302 U.S. 120, 128-30, 58 S.Ct. 125, 128-30, 82 L.Ed. 147 (1937). Since these proceedings began prior to Keel's dissolution, Keel can continue as a party and is a person within section 67(c).
The debtor asserts that Warner "has not filed a claim against RCOA . . ." and therefore concludes that Warner is not aggrieved by confirmation of the plan. The definition of person aggrieved is broad. 315 F.Supp. at 106-07. Warner alleges to be involved in litigation with the debtor. The outcome of that litigation might create rights for Warner against the debtor. The confirmation of the debtor's plan might detrimentally affect the rights thus created. Id. at 107. Such a possibility is sufficient to give Warner standing as a person aggrieved.
The above analysis applies in the case of Pickwick which is also allegedly involved in unresolved litigation with the debtor. The lawsuit is apparently pending before the bankruptcy court and until it is finally resolved Pickwick's rights could be affected by the confirmation of RCOA's plan. Pickwick thus is a person aggrieved under section 67(c).
Atlantic and RCOA are also involved in litigation. The bankruptcy court and the district court have held in favor of RCOA, but Atlantic has appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. Since the litigation is still pending, Atlantic is a person aggrieved and has standing to appeal the confirmation order.
All five (5) appellants before this court are persons and they are aggrieved by the order confirming RCOA's plan. They thus conform to the requirements of section 67(c).
RCOA argues that a second requirement to have standing is that an appellant must have appeared at the confirmation hearing. The requirement of appearing at a hearing was adopted by this district in 1944. In re Mifflinburg Body Co., 54 F.Supp. 560, 561 (M.D.Pa.1944). The requirement is also enunciated in Collier on Bankruptcy. 2A Collier on Bankruptcy 1496-97 (14th Ed. 1978). The appellants cite no authority to the contrary and this court has found none.
The issue is whether each of the five (5) appellants appeared at the hearing on the confirmation of the plan. It is undisputed that Attorney Thompson appeared at the confirmation hearing. The dispute concerns whom he represented or whether the entity he claimed to represent existed.
The debtor's assertion is that the five (5) appellants were not represented at the confirmation hearing because at the hearing when he was asked to indicate whom he represented Attorney Thompson
This language has been interpreted as putting the burden of production and persuasion on the party challenging an attorney's assertion as to whom he represents. In re Sarah Allen Home, Inc., 7 B.R. 732, 734 (Bkrtcy.E.D.Pa.1980).
RCOA has offered as evidence to support its allegation that Thompson does not represent whom he claims to represent an affidavit of Sigmund Friedman. In his affidavit Mr. Friedman alleges to have spoken with the treasurer of Ivy Hill Communications. Ivy Hill was a creditor of RCOA. Thompson filed a notice of appeal in Ivy Hill's name and then withdrew the notice. The treasurer of Ivy Hill allegedly told Friedman:
Even assuming the reliability of this hearsay assertion, Thompson may represent appellants other than Ivy Hill. Attorney Thompson has filed documents with the bankruptcy court and with this court in which he claims to represent the five (5) appellants, United Artists, Warner, Keel, Atlantic, and Pickwick. The presumption is that he represents these appellants and represented these appellants at the confirmation hearing. Attorney Thompson's failure to clearly articulate whom he represented when asked to do so at the confirmation hearing is unfortunate. Apparently Attorney Thompson's affiliation with a law firm was in flux during the period in question. Because of the change in his legal affiliation and his failure to clarify which attorney represented the appellants, Attorney Thompson has left himself open to the assertions which the debtor has made. On these facts, Attorney Thompson has been saved by the presumption.
RCOA alleges that United Artists did not appear at the confirmation hearing because United Artists had been merged with Capitol and did not exist. Since it has previously been determined that United Artists may pursue legal proceedings in its own name even after the merger, RCOA's assertion is incorrect. The same basic analysis would apply to Keel.
The presumption that Attorney Thompson represents whom he says he does, the ability of United Artists and Keel to pursue legal proceedings, and Attorney Thompson's appearance at the confirmation hearing result in the legal appearance of all five (5) appellants at the confirmation hearing. Thus the appellants have standing to pursue their appeals.
The debtor also argues that compliance with Bankruptcy Rule 11-38(c) is a requirement for standing. Rule 11-38(c) says:
The argument is that since only one of the appellants filed an objection (namely United
Rule 11-38 does not indicate that the filing of objections prior to confirmation or by an earlier date if the court so orders is a standing issue. The debtor does not point to any cases which have determined that compliance with Rule 11-38(c) is a prerequisite to appeal a confirmation order.
Two factors mitigate against the debtor's argument. First, Rule 11-38(d) seems to provide the consequences of a failure to comply with Rule 11-38(c). Rule 11-38(d) says:
The bankruptcy court, if no objections are filed, may draw certain conclusions about the plan without taking proof. The ability of the court to draw these conclusions is the direct consequence of a failure to comply with Rule 11-38(c).
The second factor is the impossibility of objecting to certain aspects of the confirmation proceedings within the Rule 11-38(c) deadline. If compliance with Rule 11-38(c) was a general requirement to appeal a confirmation order, then all events relating to the conducting of the confirmation hearing would be non-reviewable.
Rule 11-38(c) is not a requirement for standing to appeal the confirmation order. The four (4) appellants, Warner, Keel, Atlantic and Pickwick have standing to appeal the confirmation order even though they did not file objections under Rule 38-11(c).
Comment
User Comments