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An A.S. Pratt & Sons Publication June 2013 Headnote: The Bankrupt Law Firm Steven A. Meyerowitz The Law Firm Becomes a Bankrupt Jonathan M. Landers Bond is Back Daniel Martin New York Bankruptcy Court Adopts Expansive View of Section 363 Free and Clear Assets Sales Shmuel Vasser and Deborah Sohn Holding the Defensive Line: Delaware Court Rejects Extension of Warn Act Liability to Private Equity Sponsor M. Natasha Labovitz and Shannon M. Kahn Always Be Prepared: Forecasting a Business Partner s Financial Problems and How to Prepare Donald A. Workman, Christopher J. Giaimo, and Dena S. Kessler Fifth Circuit Upholds Absurd Cramdown Interest Rate Lawrence V. Gelber and Neil S. Begley Secured Lender s Full Credit Bid Barred Later Recovery From Guarantors Adam C. Harris, Lawrence V. Gelber, and Michael L. Cook Delaware Chancery Court Finds Reverse Triangular Merger Under Delaware Law Does Not Effect an Assignment of Rights of the Surviving Corporation Eric R. Markus, Roy E. Bertolatus, John B. Clutterbuck, and Lee Davis Delaware Bankruptcy Court Declines to Designate Votes of Parties to a Post-Petition Restructuring Support Agreement Lenard M. Parkins, Michael E. Foreman, and Yonit Caplow Fifth Circuit Refuses to Adopt Artificial Impairment Standard to Reverse Confirmation of Chapter 11 Single Asset Real Estate Plan Edward L. Ripley, Mark W. Wege, and Eric M. English

Editor-in-chief Steven A. Meyerowitz President, Meyerowitz Communications Inc. Assistant Editor Catherine Dillon BOARD OF EDITORS Scott L. Baena Bilzin Sumberg Baena Price & Axelrod LLP Leslie A. Berkoff Moritt Hock & Hamroff LLP Ted A. Berkowitz Farrell Fritz, P.C. Andrew P. Brozman Clifford Chance US LLP Kevin H. Buraks Portnoff Law Associates, Ltd. Peter S. Clark II Reed Smith LLP Thomas W. Coffey Tucker Ellis & West LLP Michael L. Cook Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP Mark G. Douglas Jones Day Timothy P. Duggan Stark & Stark Gregg M. Ficks Coblentz, Patch, Duffy & Bass LLP Mark J. Friedman DLA Piper Robin E. Keller Lovells William I. Kohn Schiff Hardin LLP Matthew W. Levin Alston & Bird LLP Alec P. Ostrow Stevens & Lee P.C. Deryck A. Palmer Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP N. Theodore Zink, Jr. Chadbourne & Parke LLP Pratt s Journal of Bankruptcy Law is published eight times a year by A.S. Pratt & Sons, 805 Fifteenth Street, NW., Third Floor, Washington, DC 20005-2207, Copyright 2013 Reed Elsevier Properties SA., used under license by Matthew Bender & Company, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this journal may be reproduced in any form by microfilm, xerography, or otherwise or incorporated into any information retrieval system without the written permission of the copyright owner. Requests to reproduce material contained in this publication should be addressed to A.S. Pratt & Sons, 805 Fifteenth Street, NW., Third Floor, Washington, DC 20005-2207, fax: 703-528- 1736. For permission to photocopy or use material electronically from Pratt s Journal of Bankruptcy Law, please access www.copyright.com or contact the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc. (CCC), 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, 978-750-8400. CCC is a not-for-profit organization that provides licenses and registration for a variety of users. For subscription information and customer service, call 1-800-572-2797. Direct any editorial inquires and send any material for publication to Steven A. Meyerowitz, Editor-in-Chief, Meyerowitz Communications Inc., PO Box 7080, Miller Place, NY 11764, smeyerow@optonline.net, 631.331.3908 (phone) / 631.331.3664 (fax). Material for publication is welcomed articles, decisions, or other items of interest to bankers, officers of financial institutions, and their attorneys. This publication is designed to be accurate and authoritative, but neither the publisher nor the authors are rendering legal, accounting, or other professional services in this publication. If legal or other expert advice is desired, retain the services of an appropriate professional. The articles and columns reflect only the present considerations and views of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the firms or organizations with which they are affiliated, any of the former or present clients of the authors or their firms or organizations, or the editors or publisher. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Pratt s Journal of Bankruptcy Law, A.S. Pratt & Sons, 805 Fifteenth Street, NW., Third Floor, Washington, DC 20005-2207. ISSN 1931-6992

Delaware Bankruptcy Court Declines to Designate Votes of Parties to a Post-Petition Restructuring Support Agreement Lenard M. Parkins, Michael E. Foreman, and Yonit Caplow In In re Indianapolis Downs, LLC, the Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware provided direction on what constitutes an acceptable post-petition lock-up agreement and joined a majority of decisions that have narrowly construed the prohibition in the Bankruptcy Code against post-petition solicitation of a vote for a plan prior to circulation of a court-approved disclosure statement. This article discusses the case. The Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware in In re Indianapolis Downs, LLC 1 declined to designate the votes of parties to a post-petition restructuring support agreement (i.e., a lock-up agreement), instead confirming the debtors Modified Second Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization (the Plan ) based on the votes of such parties. In doing so, the court provided direction on what constitutes an acceptable post-petition lock-up agreement and joined a majority of decisions that have narrowly construed the prohibition in the Bankruptcy Code against post-petition solicitation of a vote for a plan prior to circulation of a court-approved disclosure statement. Lenard M. Parkins is a partner, Michael E. Foreman is of counsel, and Yonit Caplow is an associate, at Haynes and Boone, LLP. The authors may be contacted at lenard.parkins@haynesboone.com, michael.foreman@ haynesboone.com, and yonit.caplow@haynesboone.com, respectively. 376 Published by A.S. Pratt in the June 2013 issue of Pratt s Journal of Bankruptcy Law. Copyright 2013 Reed Elsevier Properties SA 1-800-456-2340.

Factual Background Delaware Bankruptcy Court Declines to Designate Votes The debtors, Indianapolis Downs, LLC and Indiana Capital Corp., operated a horse racing track and casino a racino in Shelbyville, Indiana, where patrons could engage in a wide variety of wagering activities. Prior to bankruptcy, debtors had substantial indebtedness, and in late 2010, debtors failed to make the requisite interest payments due to holders of the second lien debt. After pre-bankruptcy negotiations did not resolve the issues, debtors filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. After months of negotiations and intermittent litigation, a group of holders of the second lien debt (the Ad Hoc Second Lien Committee ), and Fortress Investment Group, LLC ( Fortress ) (who held a substantial portion of the third lien debt, as well as second lien debt) ultimately agreed to a parallel path approach to reorganization with the debtors. Under the parallel path approach, which was memorialized in a post-petition lock-up agreement called the Restructuring Support Agreement (the RSA ), the parties agreed that the debtors would test the markets to determine if a satisfactory sales price could be obtained, but if not, the debtors would proceed with recapitalization. Among other things, the RSA included a provision prohibiting any party to the RSA [from] proposing, supporting or voting for a competing plan of reorganization, and required that parties to the RSA vote yes for a plan that complies with the RSA. The RSA also contained a clause for specific performance and injunctive or other equitable relief if the RSA was breached. The RSA was binding upon execution on creditor signatories (Fortress and the members of the Ad Hoc Second Lien Committee), and upon the debtors once the court approved the disclosure statement. The debtors subsequently received a satisfactory bid from Centaur LLC ( Centaur ), and requested court approval of the sale to Centaur and confirmation of the Plan upon which the sale was predicated. Certain members of senior management and holders of equity and debt of the debtors (collectively, the Oliver Parties ) objected to confirmation of the Plan, arguing that the RSA constituted an impermissible solicitation of votes post-petition, in contravention of 1125(b) of the Bankruptcy Code. The Oliver Parties further maintained that the votes of the parties to the RSA should be designated pursuant to 1126(e), which would ultimately result in rendering the debtors incapable of securing sufficient votes to confirm the plan. 377

Pratt s Journal of Bankruptcy Law Bankruptcy Code 1125 and 1126 Section 1125(b) of the Bankruptcy Code provides the structured format by which a Plan proponent must seek approval for its Plan: (b) An acceptance or rejection of a plan may not be solicited after the commencement of the case under this title from a holder of a claim or interest with respect to such claim or interest, unless, at the time of or before such solicitation, there is transmitted to such holder the plan or a summary of the plan, and a written disclosure statement approved, after notice and a hearing, by the court as containing adequate information. 2 Under 1126(e), the court may, at the request of a party in interest, and after notice and a hearing, designate the votes of any party whose acceptance or rejection of such plan was not in good faith, or was not solicited or procured in good faith or in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. 3 The Court s analysis of 1125 and 1126 The court found that the RSA did not constitute an improper solicitation of votes and refused to designate the votes of the parties to the RSA. In reaching that conclusion, the court reasoned that since Congress intended for creditors and debtors to negotiate with each other, a narrow construction of solicitation affords these parties the opportunity to memorialize their agreements in a way that allows a Chapter 11 case to move forward. The court further found that the original intent of 1125(b) was to protect the interest of creditors and stockholders [who] were too illinformed [sic] to act capably in their own interests, but that here, the parties, sophisticated financial players represented by able and experienced professionals, were not in need of such oversight. Finally, the court underscored the importance of creditor suffrage, noting that [d]esignation of a creditor s vote is a drastic remedy, and, as a result, designation of votes is the exception, not the rule. 4 In reaching its conclusion, the court relied upon the Third Circuit deci- 378

Delaware Bankruptcy Court Declines to Designate Votes sion in In re Century Glove. 5 In that case, the Third Circuit was confronted with deciding the propriety of the creditors activity, when one creditor circulated a competing draft plan that was not approved by the court, in an attempt to convince other creditors to reject the debtor s plan. The court in Century Glove ultimately refused to find that the creditor s actions constituted solicitation, explaining that [w]e find no principled, predictable difference between negotiation and solicitation of future acceptances. We therefore reject any definition of solicitation which might cause creditors to limit their negotiations. The court in Indianapolis Downs also borrowed from the reasoning of In re Heritage Organization, LLC. 6 In that case, the Chapter 11 Trustee and some of the former Heritage clients with claims in the case (the Client Claimants ) signed a Term Sheet that provided, among other things, that the Claimants would vote to accept the plan. The Trustee and the Client Claimants then filed a disclosure statement and a joint plan, and the court refused to designate the votes of the Claimants, concluding that if a creditor believes that it has sufficient information about the case and the available alternatives to jointly propose a Chapter 11 plan with another entity it is absurd to think that the signing of a term sheet by those parties is an improper solicitation of votes in accordance with 1125(b). The court in Indianapolis Downs found the situation it was confronted with analogous, stating that [w]hile the Restructuring Support Parties are not coproponents [sic] of the Debtors Plan, given their significant respective stakes in the Debtors and the Court s own observation of these parties involvement in these proceedings, precisely the same considerations pertain here. The Bigger Picture In reaching the conclusion in Indianapolis Downs, the court distinguished the case from the outcomes in two other Delaware bankruptcy cases, In re Stations Holdings Co., Inc, 7 and In re NII Holdings, Inc. 8 In those cases, the court designated the vote of the creditors who had participated in post-petition lock-up agreements. The court in Indianapolis Downs found that those pre-packaged cases had markedly different factual and procedural context[s] and, as the decisions were two-page orders with no legal 379

Pratt s Journal of Bankruptcy Law analysis, were of limited (if any) precedential value. The court found that the interests of disclosure underlying 1125 were not at material risk where the voters in question were sophisticated financial players represented by able and experienced professionals, noting that the argument that the voters should have been afforded a chance to review a court-approved disclosure statement, even after signing the RSA, would grossly elevate form over substance. Notably, the court in Heritage had distinguished the Client Claimants lock-up agreement from those in Stations Holdings and in NII Holdings in part because the Client Claimants lock-up agreement did not contain a provision requiring specific performance. The court in Heritage stated that part of the reason the courts in Stations Holdings and in NII Holdings designated the votes of the parties to the lock-up agreements was that specific performance provisions prevented the locked-up creditor [from] reconsider[ing] its preliminary decision to vote in favor of the plan after receiving adequate information, and the locked-up creditor was stripped of the Bankruptcy Code s protection against the harm caused by solicitation without court-approved, adequate information. Interestingly, in refusing to designate the votes, the court in Indianapolis Downs noted that if the Plan as filed conformed to the heavily-negotiated RSA, the parties were entitled to demand and rely upon assurances that accepting votes would be cast by the parties thereto. It remains to be seen whether Indianapolis Downs is herald to a new line of cases where bankruptcy courts will be called upon to determine the legitimacy of various post-petition lock-up agreements memorializing complex negotiations among sophisticated parties, or certain provisions thereof, when plan solicitation, voting and confirmation are challenged. NOTES 1 No. 11-11046 (BLS), 2013 WL 395137 (Bankr. D. Del. Jan. 31, 2013). 2 11 U.S.C. 1125(b). 3 11 U.S.C. 1126(e). 4 In re Adelphia Commc ns. Corp., 359 B.R. 54, 61 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2006). 5 860 F.2d 94 (3d. Cir. 1988). 6 376 B.R. 783 (Bankr. N.D. Tex. 2007). 380

Delaware Bankruptcy Court Declines to Designate Votes 7 No. 02-10883 (MFW) (Bankr. D. Del. 2002) (Order dated September 30, 2002) [Docket No. 177]. 8 No. 02-11505 (MFW) (Bankr. D. Del. 2002) (Order dated October 25, 2002) [Docket No. 367]. 381