Your client or borrower is a troubled business that desperately needs to find a buyer or new money, and fast. Somebody suggests that your client/borrower hire an intermediary, but the company already has one “offer” (for purchase, refinance, investment), so is reluctant to hire an investment banker to run a thorough process to find other possible solutions.
Asset Sales Committee
Committees
In September 2015, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit issued an opinion in In re ICL Holding Co. Inc. that further reinforces the ability to use § 363 sales and settlements to resolve chapter 11 cases.
Section 363 sales are a common vehicle for a debtor and its creditors to receive fair value for the debtor’s assets through an open auction process supervised by the bankruptcy court. An open auction process is designed to generate a number of competitive offers for the debtor’s assets.
On June 16, 2015, the Asset Sales Committee sponsored a webinar titled Buying and Selling Oil & Gas Assets in Bankruptcy Cases. The presentation, by Thompson & Knight Partner Ira L. Herman, Greenberg Traurig Shareholder Shari Heyen and Conway MacKenzie Managing Director Bryan M. Gaston, is available in ABI’s CLE Center.
Over the past two decades, chapter 11 has become the favored forum for the sale of distressed companies in the U.S. Section 363 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code is a strong tool for maximizing the value of struggling companies and providing predictability in distress sales.
Post-Annual Spring Meeting is a time of change for ABI, including our committee's leadership! The term of John Hutton, our co-chair for the past several years, has ended, and Brad Sharp has been named as a new co-chair. Shaunna Jones has become our Newsletter Editor. To date, the Listserve Facilitator position remains open. If you are interested in joining the leadership team by filling this role, please email us. We thank those departing leaders who have served us well, and welcome aboard our new committee leaders.
Fracking, shorthand for hydraulic fracturing, is a type of drilling used by oil and gas prospectors. It involves drilling thousands of feet below the surface before gradually turning horizontal and continuing onward. As a result, an initially unsuccessful drilling site can give rise to several unique wells. Similarly, it is possible that a case that is unsuccessful at generating a unanimous decision may also present various twists and turns by a group of appellate judges, which can give rise to several unique opinions.
Under § 363 of the Bankruptcy Code, a trustee or debtor in possession may sell property “free and clear of any interest in such property of an entity other than the estate” if certain conditions are met.[1] That property may be sold “free and clear of any interest” has the effect of blocking post-sale claims against the purchaser, as “principles underlying the finality of 363 sale orders” are considered “much too important” for a court to otherwise deny full enforcement.[2]
Editor’s Note: This article was originally published by Law360 on April 24, 2014.
One of the highest-profile aspects of the City of Detroit’s chapter 9 case[1] has been the intense discussion of the fate of the Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA), which is almost unique among U.S. art museums in that its building and collection are owned by the city itself rather than by a charitable nonprofit entity. City ownership is what has put the DIA’s collection “in play,” as the city’s creditors are looking to the DIA’s rich collection as a potential source of repayment of the city’s debts.
In In re Tribune Co., 2014 WL 2797042 (D. Del. June 18, 2014), the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware upheld Tribune Company’s plan of reorganization, dismissing a series of appeals as equitably moot. The court’s decision is of particular interest because it comes on the heels of a significant decision by the U.S.
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