April 17, COMI: What Is It And Why Does It Matter?

Similar documents
In re Fairfield Sentry Ltd.: Second Circuit Provides Guidance to COMI Determinations in Chapter 15 Cases

The Fourth Circuit Upholds Application of Section 365(n) of the Bankruptcy Code over Contrary Foreign Law in Chapter 15 Case

An A.S. Pratt & Sons Publication september 2013

Bankruptcy Court Rules a Foreign Insolvency Plan That Extinguishes Claims Against Non-debtor Subsidiaries is Manifestly Contrary to US Public Policy

mg Doc 6 Filed 02/16/12 Entered 02/16/12 11:22:25 Main Document Pg 1 of 16

Supreme Court Bars Use of Nonconsensual Priority-Violating Structured Dismissals

Chapter 15 and Cross- Border Insolvency

United States Court of Appeals

Chapter 15 Turns One: Ironing Out the Details. November/December Mark G. Douglas

Case 1:15-mc JGK Document 26 Filed 05/11/15 Page 1 of 10

2 New Decisions Clarify Chapter 15 Requirements

Case 1:11-cv AT Document 28 Filed 02/28/14 Page 1 of 31 MEMORANDUM OF LAW IN SUPPORT OF TRUSTEE S MOTION TO INTERVENE

Enforcement of Foreign Orders Under Chapter 15

First Circuit Holds That Trademark Licensee Loses Right to Use Trademarks When Debtor-Licensor Rejects License

reg Doc 2 Filed 02/03/15 Entered 02/03/15 10:35:52 Main Document Pg 1 of 10

NOTICE OF PRESENTMENT OF WIND DOWN CO S MOTION FOR ENTRY OF AN ORDER EXTENDING THE CLAIMS OBJECTION BAR DATE

Cross-Border Insolvency in the U.S. under Chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code

DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS LIABILITY BANKRUPTCY STAYS OF LITIGATION AGAINST NON-DEBTORS JUNE 12, 2003 JOSEPH M. MCLAUGHLIN S IMPSON THACHER & BARTLETT LLP

mg Doc 2 Filed 03/29/13 Entered 03/29/13 14:27:51 Main Document Pg 1 of 18

NOTICE OF TWENTY-FIFTH OMNIBUS OBJECTION TO CLAIMS (Redundant Claims)

United States Supreme Court Limits Investor Suits for Misleading Statements of Opinion

Case 1:12-cv VM Document 30 Filed 02/06/13 Page 1 of 12 LJSDC NY: Plaintiff, Defendant. Debtor. VICTOR MARRERO, united States District Judge.

brl Doc 111 Filed 12/17/13 Entered 12/17/13 15:22:56 Main Document Pg 1 of 12

The Common Interest Privilege in Bankruptcy: Recent Trends and Practical Guidance

INTERNATIONAL RESTRUCTURING NEWSWIRE

Delaware Bankruptcy Court Confirms Lock-Up Agreements Are a Valuable Tool Not a Violation of the Bankruptcy Code

Case 1:15-cv JMF Document 9 Filed 08/27/15 Page 1 of 14

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK. Master File No. 08 Civ

Cite as: Application of Safe Harbor Provisions to Early Termination of Swap Agreements, 9 ST. JOHN S BANKR. RESEARCH LIBR. NO. 1 (2017).

COMMENTARY JONES DAY. One way for a natural gas supply contract to constitute a swap agreement, is for it to be found to be

Second Circuit Holds Bankruptcy Code Safe Harbors Bar State Law Fraudulent Conveyance Claims Brought By Individual Creditors

smb Doc 21 Filed 01/12/15 Entered 01/12/15 18:27:33 Main Document Pg 1 of 22

Case KG Doc 5 Filed 08/16/16 Page 1 of 34 IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE

ENTERED TAWANA C. MARSHALL, CLERK THE DATE OF ENTRY IS ON THE COURT'S DOCKET

Chapter 15 Recognition Mandatory and Fully Encumbered Assets Are Property of the Debtor Protected by Automatic Stay. November/December 2013

In re Toft; Section 1506 Public Policy Exception Trumps General Grant of Comity. Malerie Ma, J.D. Candidate 2013

directly to a court in the United States for any relief such as operating the debtor s business

smb Doc 234 Filed 04/06/16 Entered 04/06/16 12:55:19 Main Document Pg 1 of 9

Rollex Corp. v. Associated Materials, Inc. (In re Superior Siding & Window, Inc.) 14 F.3d 240 (4th Cir. 1994)

TRUSTEE S OBJECTION TO MOTION TO STAY APPEAL OF ORDER DENYING REMOVAL OF TRUSTEE

Case , Document 48-1, 07/16/2015, , Page1 of 1

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

OCEAN RIG: CHARTING A COURSE THROUGH CHAPTER 15 PROVISIONAL RELIEF, RECOGNITION, AND APPEALS

smb Doc 135 Filed 10/06/17 Entered 10/06/17 16:36:33 Main Document Pg 1 of 13

Forum Non Conveniens and Chapter 15 Bankruptcy. Tyler Levine J.D. Candidate 2018

Petitioners, 10-CV-5256 (KMW) (DCF) -against- OPINION & ORDER GOVERNMENT OF THE LAO PEOPLE S DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC,

THE LAWS OF THE VIRGIN ISLANDS. STATUTORY INSTRUMENT No. 45 of 2005 INSOLVENCY RULES, 2005

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA SOUTHERN DIVISION NOTICE OF DEBTORS MOTION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER

BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS FINANCIAL SERVICES COMMISSION

August 20, Subcommittee on Regulatory Reform, Committee on the Judiciary. House of Representatives Washington, DC Washington, DC 20515

Case MFW Doc 275 Filed 04/20/18 Page 1 of 11 IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE. Chapter 11.

mg Doc 28 Filed 06/20/14 Entered 06/20/14 17:18:03 Main Document Pg 1 of 10

Case , Document 34-1, 03/18/2016, , Page1 of 1

IP in Bankruptcy: Addressing Licensor and Licensee Concerns

Delaware Bankruptcy Court Confirms the Validity of Plan Support Agreements. May/June George R. Howard Mark G. Douglas

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

Case 1:12-cv JSR Document 22 Filed 02/21/13 Page 1 of 15

Client Alert. Revisiting Venue: Patriot Coal and the Interest of Justice. Background

Application of the Automatic Stay to a Non-Debtor Corporation Joanna Matuza, J.D. Candidate 2017

Recent Developments in European Insolvency Law and the Foreign Proceeding Requirement of Bankruptcy Code Section 304:

Second Circuit Settles the Meaning of Settlement Payments Under Section 546(e) of the Bankruptcy Code. November/December 2011

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS EASTERN DIVISION

Three Provocative Business Bankruptcy Decisions of 2018

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK. In re. Petition of David McGuigan, as foreign : representative of

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO EASTERN DIVISION

Case 1:12-cv JSR Document 13 Filed 09/19/12 Page 1 of 16

Another Blow to Triangular Setoff in Bankruptcy: Synthetic Mutuality No Substitute for the Real Thing. November/December 2011

The things a security taker needs to know about receivership under BVI law

FOR PUBLICATION Chapter 15

TRUSTEE S MEMORANDUM OF LAW IN SUPPORT OF MOTION IN LIMINE TO EXCLUDE TESTIMONY BY ROBERT BLECKER

Case Document 90 Filed in TXSB on 03/04/10 Page 1 of 8 IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS

Police or Regulatory Power Exception to Automatic Stay. Linda Attreed, J.D. Candidate 2013

Alert Memo. New York Court of Appeals Reaffirms In Pari Delicto Defense for Outside Professionals

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

Case 1:17-mc DAB Document 28 Filed 06/22/17 Page 1 of 20

IN THE MATTER OF FAIRFIELD SENTRY LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) AND IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION FOR AND ANTI-SUIT INJUNCTION

Case 1:14-cv JSR Document 165 Filed 06/14/16 Page 1 of 6 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK

BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA (Charlotte Division)

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON AT SEATTLE I. INTRODUCTION

Third Circuit Holds That Claims Are Disallowable Under Section 502(d) of the Bankruptcy Code No Matter Who Holds Them

Law360. 2nd Circ. Favors Appellees Under Equitable Mootness. by Gregory G. Hesse and Henry P. Long III, Hunton & Williams LLP

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE. x : : : : : : : x

Case 1:17-cv GBD Document 12 Filed 11/01/17 Page 1 of 28

INTERNET ADVERTISING AGREEMENT. THIS AGREEMENT made as of this day of, 2004.

Case 8:91-ap KRM Doc 458 Filed 09/09/15 Page 1 of 21 UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA TAMPA DIVISION

Case MFW Doc 1878 Filed 02/26/16 Page 1 of 18 IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE

_._..._------_._ _.._... _..._..._}(

Mandatory Subordination Under Section 510(b) Extends to Claims Arising From Purchase or Sale of Affiliate s Securities

CCAA: Cross Border Insolvency and Re IMRIS

Cross-Border Bankruptcy Battleground: The Importance of Comity (Part I) March/April Mark G. Douglas Nicholas C. Kamphaus

Case 1:12-cv JSR Document 22 Filed 08/02/13 Page 1 of x

by Santiago Carregal 1

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN

Section 546(e) Safe Harbor Defense: When to Utilize and When to Preclude. Amanda Tersigni, J.D. Candidate 2018

Case 1:17-cv GBD Document 14 Filed 11/01/17 Page 1 of 23

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION ) ) ) ) ) )

CONCURRENT SESSION. Lisa M. Schweitzer, Moderator Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP. Paul M. Basta Kirkland & Ellis LLP

smb Doc 1047 Filed 11/22/17 Entered 11/22/17 15:28:30 Main Document Pg 1 of 13

MEMORANDUM. ("Pickard"), defendants in the above-captioned adversary proceeding ("Defendants"), move this

Transcription:

April 17, 2013 The Second Circuit Rules that the Filing of a Chapter 15 Petition is the Relevant Period for Determining a Foreign Debtor s Center of Main Interests (or COMI ) and that COMI Factors Include Any Relevant Activities of the Foreign Debtor In Morning Mist Holdings Ltd. v. Krys (In re Fairfield Sentry Ltd.), Case No. 11-4376, 2013 WL 1593348 (2d Cir. Apr. 16, 2013), the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (the Court or Second Circuit ) ruled that the time of the filing of a chapter 15 petition determines a foreign debtor s center of main interests, or COMI, for purposes of recognizing a foreign proceeding as a foreign main proceeding under the Bankruptcy Code. In doing so, the Second Circuit rejected the notion that a COMI determination requires consideration of a foreign debtor s operational history, but recognized that a bankruptcy court may properly examine the period between the commencement of the foreign proceeding and the filing of a chapter 15 petition to ensure that a foreign debtor has not manipulated its COMI in bad faith. In addition to deciding the period governing the COMI determination, the Second Circuit adopted a broad and flexible standard for deciding COMI, concluding that any relevant activities, including liquidation activities and administrative functions, may be considered. Finally, the Second Circuit confirmed that the public policy exception to chapter 15 relief should be narrowly construed and invoked only in exceptional circumstances. 1 COMI: What Is It And Why Does It Matter? Chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code ( Chapter 15 ) governs US bankruptcy court recognition of foreign insolvency cases. 2 COMI refers to a foreign debtor s center of its main interests, an undefined statutory metric courts apply that determines the scope of US relief available to a foreign debtor in a foreign insolvency case under the Bankruptcy Code. 3 Notably, Chapter 15 grants broad automatic relief where the foreign insolvency case is pending in the country of a debtor s COMI (a foreign main proceeding ), including application of the automatic stay to the debtor and its property in the US. 4 Other foreign insolvency cases may also benefit from Chapter 15 ( foreign non-main proceedings ), but broad relief is 1 Morning Mist Holdings Ltd. v. Krys (In re Fairfield Sentry Ltd.), Case No. 11-4376, 2013 WL 1593348, at *10 (2d Cir. Apr. 16, 2013) ( Fairfield Sentry II ). 2 In re Millennium Global Emerging Credit Master Fund Ltd., 474 B.R. 88, 91 (S.D.N.Y. 2012). 3 11 U.S.C. 1502(4). 4 11 U.S.C. 1502(4), 1520. 2013 Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP. In some jurisdictions, this publication may be considered attorney advertising. Past representations are no guarantee of future outcomes.

not automatic; its availability depends instead on the bankruptcy court s discretion (which courts generally exercise liberally). 5 A foreign proceeding which is neither main nor non-main may not be eligible for Chapter 15 relief at all, and where the foreign debtor cannot otherwise satisfy the jurisdictional requirements of the Bankruptcy Code, the foreign debtor may be shut out from bankruptcy court access entirely. 6 Fairfield Sentry a Madoff Feeder Fund Files for Chapter 15 Relief Fairfield Sentry Limited ( Sentry ), organized and incorporated under the law of the British Virgin Islands ( BVI ), was a vehicle for mainly non-u.s. persons to invest with Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities, Inc. ( BLMIS ). 7 Fairfield Greenwich Group ( FGG ), based in New York, served as Sentry s investment manager. 8 In December 2008, it was publicly revealed that BLMIS had been operated as a massive Ponzi scheme, as a result of which, billions of dollars of investor funds (including funds held on behalf of Sentry) had been paid out by BLMIS as returns of principal, fictitious profits, or otherwise dissipated and misappropriated. 9 Sentry ceased its routine operations following the 2008 disclosure of the Madoff Ponzi scheme, and its board began winding down Sentry s business and preserving its assets in anticipation of litigation and bankruptcy. 10 On July 21, 2009, the High Court of Justice of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court (the BVI Court ) entered an order commencing Sentry s liquidation proceeding in the BVI (the BVI Proceeding ). Some eleven months later, on June 14, 2010, the BVI liquidators filed a petition for recognition with the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York (the Bankruptcy Court ) of the BVI liquidation proceedings under Chapter 15 (the Chapter 15 Petition ) to, among other things, facilitate the liquidators access to U.S. courts in connection with the pursuit of Sentry s claims, and to afford the liquidators discovery rights. 11 Previously, in May 2009, Sentry shareholder Morning Mist Holdings Limited ( Morning Mist ) had filed a derivative action in a New York state court alleging that Sentry s directors, management and service providers breached duties to Sentry (the Derivative Action ). 12 5 11 U.S.C. 1502(5), 1521. 6 See, e.g., Lavie v. Ran (In re Ran), 607 F.3d 1017, 1022 (5 th Cir. 2010). 7 In Fairfield Sentry Limited, Case No. 10-civ.-7311 (GBD), 2011 WL 4357421, at *1 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 16, 2011) ( Fairfield Sentry I ). 8 9 10 Fairfield Sentry II, 2013 WL 1593348, at *1. 11 Fairfield Sentry I, 2011 WL 4357421, at *2. 12 Fairfield Sentry II, 2013 WL 1593348, at *2.

Over Morning Mist s objection, the Bankruptcy Court issued an order on July 22, 2010 recognizing the BVI Proceeding as a foreign main proceeding under section 1517(b)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code, and staying Morning Mist s Derivative Action. 13 Morning Mist appealed to the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (the District Court ), arguing that the bankruptcy court erred by relying upon the BVI Proceeding, including activities incidental thereto, to determine that Sentry s COMI was in the BVI. 14 On appeal, the District Court affirmed the Bankruptcy Court ruling, concluding that the Bankruptcy Court properly (i) considered the time at and around Sentry s Chapter 15 Petition in determining its COMI, and (ii) considered the liquidators activities as part of the COMI determination. 15 The District Court also rejected Morning Mist s argument that recognition of the BVI Proceeding violated U.S. public policy because the BVI Proceeding was cloaked in secrecy. 16 On further appeal, the Second Circuit affirmed the lower court decisions. 17 The Chapter 15 Petition Date Determines COMI Throughout, Morning Mist argued that the Bankruptcy Court should have considered Sentry s entire 18 year operational history to make the COMI finding, which it believed was in New York. To identify the relevant date for the COMI determination, the Second Circuit considered (i) the statutory text, (ii) guidance from other federal courts, and (iii) international sources. 18 Turning first to the Bankruptcy Code itself, the Second Circuit noted that Chapter 15 does not define COMI. It found relevant that the statute does, however, define a foreign main proceeding in the present tense that is, a proceeding that is pending where the debtor has its COMI. From this, the Court concluded that Congress intended that the Chapter 15 filing date not the debtor s entire operational history should anchor the COMI analysis. 19 13 Fairfield Sentry I, 2011 WL 4357421, at *2. 14 Fairfield Sentry I, 2011 WL 4357421, at *4; Fairfield Sentry II, 2013 WL 1593348, at *3. 15 Fairfield Sentry II, 2013 WL 1593348, at *3. 16 Fairfield Sentry I, 2011 WL 4357421, at *8-9. 17 Fairfield Sentry II, 2013 WL 1593348, at *11. 18 at *4. 19 at *4-5.

The Second Circuit also relied on other federal court decisions in reaching its conclusion, nearly all of which found the Chapter 15 filing date as the relevant date for COMI purposes. 20 Significantly, the Court rejected a line of reasoning adopted by a Southern District bankruptcy court and affirmed on appeal by the District Court which equated COMI with the American jurisdictional concept of principal place of business. 21 In In re Millennium Global Emerging Credit Master Fund Ltd., 458 B.R. 63 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2011), aff d, 474 B.R. 88 (S.D.N.Y. 2012) ( Millennium Global ), the bankruptcy court reasoned that if the term principal place of business is substituted for center of main interests, it is obvious that the date for determining an entity s place of business refers to the business of the entity before it was placed in liquidation because [a] debtor does not continue to have a principal place of business after liquidation is ordered and the business stops operating. 22 From this, the Millennium Global bankruptcy court had concluded that the appropriate date for determining COMI is on or about the date of the commencement of the foreign proceeding for which recognition is sought, not the date of the chapter 15 filing in the US. 23 The Second Circuit, however, was not convinced that COMI and principal place of business were interchangeable, finding that Congress rejected the principal place of business construct previously embedded in superseded section 304 of the Bankruptcy Code when it enacted Chapter 15 in 2005. 24 Finally, the Second Circuit found that foreign sources, such as the European Union insolvency regulation, were of limited use in resolving whether US courts should determine COMI at the time of the Chapter 15 petition or in some other way. 25 Here, the Court found that the EU insolvency regime was a poor analog to Chapter 15 because a main insolvency proceeding in one EU member state is automatically recognized by all other EU member states. 26 As such, the EU regulations had no need for a recognition petition such as that provided under Chapter 15. The Court therefore concluded that the EU regulations might propound a broader time frame for considering COMI, but that the underlying rationale for doing so was not a good fit for construing Chapter 15. 27 20 at *5. 21 at *6. 22 In re Millennium Global Emerging Credit Master Fund Ltd., 458 B.R. 63, 72 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2011), aff d, 474 B.R. 88 (S.D.N.Y. 2012) (emphasis added). 23 at 76. 24 Fairfield Sentry II, 2013 WL 1593348, at *6. 25 at *7. 26 27

In the end, the Second Circuit held that a debtor s COMI should be determined based on its activities at or around the time the Chapter 15 petition is filed, but that a court may consider the period between the commencement of the foreign case and the Chapter 15 filing to ensure that a debtor did not manipulate its COMI in bad faith. 28 Any Relevant Activities May Inform the COMI Determination The parties also disputed what factors a bankruptcy court should consider when locating COMI. Morning Mist argued that Sentry s liquidation activities in the BVI Proceeding were irrelevant to the COMI determination. The liquidators, on the other hand, maintained that these activities and the BVI Proceeding itself were critical to the determination. 29 The Second Circuit held that a bankruptcy court may consider any relevant activities, including liquidation activities and administrative functions, in the COMI analysis. 30 In adopting this standard, the Court approved of a widely adopted list of factors courts have generally considered when making the determination: The location of the debtor s headquarters The location of those who actually manage the debtor (which, conceivably could be the headquarters of a holding company) The location of the debtor s primary assets The location of the majority of the debtor s creditors or of a majority of the creditors who would be affected by the case, and The jurisdiction whose law would apply to most disputes. 31 While finding this nonexclusive list a helpful guide, the Second Circuit found that the specific factors were neither required nor dispositive. Instead, the Court found that the absence of a statutory definition for a 28 at *8. 29 Fairfield Sentry II, 2103 WL 1593348, at *8. 30 31 (quoting In re SPhinX, Ltd., 351 B.R. 103, 117 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2006)).

term that is not self-defining (COMI) signified that the text was an open-ended invitation for judicial development based on the facts presented, without prescription or limitation. 32 Applying these principles, the Court readily affirmed the decision of the District Court (which affirmed the Bankruptcy Court) recognizing Sentry s BVI Proceeding as a foreign main proceeding based, in part, on Sentry s winding-up activities in the BVI when it filed its Chapter 15 Petition. 33 The BVI Proceeding s Restricted Access to Court Documents Did Not Violate US Public Policy Morning Mist also argued that the confidentiality of the BVI Proceeding in which a number of court records were filed under seal violated US public policy. 34 Section 1506 of the Bankruptcy Code allows a court to refuse relief in favor of a foreign proceeding if the action would be manifestly contrary to the public policy of the United States. 35 In a matter of first impression for the Second Circuit, the Court ruled that the statutory wording and legislative history of section 1506 requires a narrow reading of the public policy exception. It agreed with other courts that the exception should be read restrictively and invoked only under exceptional circumstances. 36 Applying this standard to Morning Mist s arguments, the Second Circuit did not view the confidentiality of the BVI Proceeding as offensive to US public policy. Not only did the Court disagree with Morning Mists characterization of the BVI Proceeding as shrouded in secrecy, but it also found that US policy itself did not recognize an unfettered public access to court records. 37 As a result, important as public access to court documents may be, the Second Circuit did not find it an exceptional or fundamental right. Rather, it was a qualified right, and as such, the Court found no basis on which to conclude that recognizing the BVI Proceeding on that ground was manifestly contrary to US public policy. 38 32 at *9. 33 34 at *10. 35 11 U.S.C. 1506. 36 Fairfield Sentry II, 2013 WL 1593348, at *10. 37 38 at *10-11.

Conclusion The Second Circuit s ruling that the filing of the Chapter 15 petition provides the relevant period for determining a foreign debtor s COMI, subject to an inquiry into whether the process has been manipulated, is only the second circuit level opinion on the issue, and the first in the context of a corporate debtor. 39 The decision infuses the recognition process for foreign insolvency cases with a welcome degree of certainty; its definitive guidance on timing, coupled with an open-ended and fact specific standard for factors appropriately considered when making the COMI determination, ensures the continued accessibility of US courts to foreign debtors in need of assistance under the Bankruptcy Code. While the Court rejected the principal place of business construct for purposes of when to determine COMI, it nonetheless believed the construct relevant for purposes of determining the existence of COMI as of the Chapter 15 petition date. The decision accordingly should not signal a material departure from the nerve center or principal place of business approach to determining corporate group COMI in cross-border restructuring cases. Finally, the Second Circuit adopted the main stream federal court interpretation of Chapter 15 s public policy exception as restrictive and applicable only under exceptional circumstances concerning matters of fundamental importance to the U.S. * * * This memorandum is not intended to provide legal advice, and no legal or business decision should be based on its content. Questions concerning issues addressed in this memorandum should be directed to: Stephen J. Shimshak 212-373-3133 sshimshak@paulweiss.com Alan W. Kornberg 212-373-3209 akornberg@paulweiss.com Claudia R. Tobler 202-223-7354 ctobler@paulweiss.com 39 See In re Ran, 607 F.3d at 1025-26 (concluding that an individual debtor s COMI is determined when the chapter 15 petition is filed and declining to look back at the debtor s history to conclude COMI lies elsewhere).