In re: Plant Insulation Co., No. 12-17466 (9th Cir. 2013)
Annotate this CasePlant, a California corporation that sold Fiberboard-manufactured asbestos-based insulation, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. At issue on appeal was whether Plant's bankruptcy plan, which allegedly left a group of insurers paying more than their fair share on a large number of asbestos personal injury claims, complied with the Bankruptcy Code. The court concluded that the bankruptcy court erred in confirming the plan where the Trust, in connection with which the plan's injunctions were to be implemented, failed to satisfy the requirements of section 524(g). Accordingly, the court vacated the order of the bankruptcy court affirming Plant's Restated Second Amended Plan of Reorganization and remanded for further proceedings.
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Court Description: Bankruptcy. The panel reversed the district court’s affirmance of the bankruptcy court’s order confirming pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 524(g) the plan of reorganization of chapter 11 debtor Plant Insulation Co., a corporation that sold asbestos-based insulation. The panel held that the plan of reorganization did not comply with § 524(g), a provision of the Bankruptcy Code under which a court-appointed fiduciary stands in for future asbestos claimants, and the court ensures that any proposed plan is fair to them. In the typical § 524(g) plan, present and future asbestos claimants obtain recovery from a trust that is funded by insurance proceeds and securities in the reorganized debtor. The bankruptcy court enters a series of “channeling injunctions” that prevent any entity from taking legal action to collect a claim or demand that is to be paid by the trust. Holding that the confirmation of a § 524(g) plan is a core bankruptcy proceeding, the panel reviewed the bankruptcy court’s findings of fact for clear error. The panel held that the Plant Insulation Co. plan should not have been confirmed because the trust, in connection with which the plan’s injunctions were to be implemented, failed to satisfy the requirements of § 524(g). The panel concluded that § 524(g) permitted the plan’s “Settling Insurer Injunction,” which barred non-settling insurers from asserting equitable contribution claims against insurers that repurchased insurance policies from Plant under guarantees for complete peace from future litigation. In addition, the injunction was fair and equitable with respect to future asbestos plaintiffs “in light of the benefits provided” to the trust by the settling insurers. The panel held that the bankruptcy and district courts properly observed this standard and, moreover, conscientiously accounted for the rights of the non-settling insurers even though the statute did not explicitly direct the courts to take cognizance of those insurers’ interests. The panel held that the trust to be implemented along with the plan satisfied § 524(g) with regard to the requirement that the trust be “funded” with the securities of the reorganized debtor. Nonetheless, the plan did not satisfy the requirement that the trust be entitled to own a majority of the voting shares of the reorganized debtor, either after confirmation or at any point where control of the reorganized debtor would meaningfully benefit the trust. The panel vacated the order of the bankruptcy court confirming Plant’s plan of reorganization and remanded to the district court with instructions that it remand to the bankruptcy court for proceedings consistent with the panel’s opinion.
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