Administrative Expenses Criminal Laws and the Code
Last month's <a href="99octtoxin.html">"Toxins-Are-Us" column</a> included a relatively brief discussion of <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=…
Dept. of Environmental Resources v. Tri-State Clinical Laboratories Inc.,</i> 178 F.3d 685 (3rd
Cir. 1999)</a>, but it is a case worth revisiting from a government perspective. The decision
involved a chapter 11 debtor charged, post-petition, with illegally disposing of infectious
medical wastes in a general dumpster rather than by the proper (read, more expensive)
method. This activity came to light when the municipal workers loading the garbage truck were
sprayed with blood spurting from test tubes left in the waste. Criminal charges were filed while
the debtor was in chapter 11, but by the time it was convicted and fined $20,000, the case had
been converted to chapter 7. The trustee successfully argued to the courts that the state's claim
for the penalty costs should be treated as a simple unsecured claim.
</p><p>In reaching that decision, the Third Circuit began with an analysis of §503(b)(1)(A), which
grants administrative status to expenses "necessary" to "preserve" the estate—<i>i.e., normally those needed</i> to allow the debtor to operate. However, as the court recognized, the Supreme Court held 30 years ago in <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… Co. v. Brown,</i> 391 U.S. 471, 483 (1968)</a>, that this test must, for policy reasons, cover all "costs ordinarily incident to the operation of a business, and not be limited to costs without which rehabilitation would be impossible." In <i>Reading,</i> the negligence of a receiver resulted in a fire that damaged a neighboring building; the court held that the tort damages were entitled to priority, even though they could not be said to "benefit" the estate. Rather, the court held, the claims of those who had harm thrust upon them by the post-petition operations of the debtor had precedence over those of pre-petition creditors who could hope to gain from those operations.
</p><p>Many courts, including the Eleventh Circuit in <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=…. Mining Co. v. Alabama Surface Mining Commission,</i> 963 F.2d 1449 (11th Cir. 1992)</a>, and the First Circuit in <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… Farms Inc. v. Florida Dept. of Environmental Protection,</i> 116 F.3d 16 (1997)</a>,<small><sup><a href="#1" name="1a">1</a></sup></small> have since applied
<i>Reading</i> to civil penalties imposed on a debtor for post-petition violations. These too, they hold,
are costs incurred during the operation of the business and the state should be no more obliged to
subordinate the costs of enforcement mechanisms that protect its citizenry to pre-petition
creditors than should post-petition tort claimants.
</p><p>These decisions are consistent with the frequently articulated view that the petition date is a
boundary: Debts incurred before that date may or may not be paid, but costs incurred thereafter
<i>must</i> be paid or the debtor should not be able to remain in bankruptcy. This requirement, with
respect to statutory obligations, is set forth explicitly in <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… U.S.C. §959(b)</a>, which provides
that "a trustee...including a debtor-in-possession, shall manage and operate the property in his
possession...according to the requirements of the valid laws of the state...in the same manner
that the owner or possessor thereof would be bound to do if in possession thereof."
</p><p>Even without that language, this would be common sense—if the debtor cannot operate lawfully
while it is in the hothouse atmosphere of the bankruptcy arena, how can it hope to do so after it
emerges? At some point the debtor must either obey the law or shut down; the petition date is
the logical starting point for that simple requirement. A debtor that receives the benefits of
federal bankruptcy relief should, at the least, comply with the same law as its competitors.
</p><p>However, the Third Circuit brushed away the logic of <i>Reading</i> and its progeny by stating that allowing the administrative claim for penalties would unfairly result in the exclusion of
resources that would otherwise be available to compensate other claimants. Standing alone, that
argument proves nothing, since giving non-traditional administrative claimants priority will
always deprive others of payment. However, the court viewed the facts in <i>Reading</i> as less
problematic because the issue there involved a compensatory claim, unlike non-compensatory
criminal penalties. Thus, the court argued virtuously, it was only acting to ensure that "real"
creditors were compensated, and were not punished for the <i>debtor's</i> misdeeds.
</p><p>In reaching that conclusion, the court took a decidedly high-minded view of the expenses that a
"legitimate" business would incur during a case. The state argued the obvious—that compliance
with the law can be expensive and that there is always a temptation for a struggling business to
ignore those requirements. If it had been as cheap and easy to dispose of hazardous wastes
properly as to simply ship them off to the municipal dump, there was no reason the debtor
would not have done so. Thus, if it did violate the law, one must assume that it was playing the
odds against getting caught—and the availability of significant sanctions is meant to change the cost-benefit calculations of those odds.
</p><p>The court, though, refused to engage in such a pragmatic view of what businesses really do.
Instead, it simply stated, "We refuse to adopt an analysis of administrative expenses that is
based upon the assumption that legitimate businesses engage in a 'cost-benefit' analysis to
determine if they will comply with criminal laws that protect the very public that the owners
and operators of those legitimate businesses are part of."<small><sup><a href="#2" name="2a">2</a></sup></small>
</p><p>Thus, the court concluded that only "legitimate" expenses will be treated as administrative; if
the debtor shouldn't have incurred the fine, then creditors shouldn't have to pay for it.
</p><p>While this might be a praiseworthy view of how businesses <i>should</i> operate, it plainly fails the reality test. Punitive sanctions <i>are</i> imposed to dissuade regulated parties from making a bet on not getting caught in violation of the law. By blinding themselves to the possibility that
businesses make such trade-offs, the court missed the point of the state's argument—namely,
that because the debtor would undoubtedly have had to incur extra costs to dispose of the wastes
properly, there <i>is</i> no unfairness to other creditors. If the debtor had obeyed the law, those added compliance costs would have been an administrative expense and would have served, just as with
a fine, to diminish the amounts available for other creditors. Whether the amounts are exactly
equivalent in a given case is irrelevant; the point is that sanctions and compliance costs are
simply opposite sides of the same administrative expense coin. The Fifth Circuit made this point
in <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… the Matter of H.L.S. Energy Co. Inc. (Texas v. Lowe),</i> 151 F.3d 434 (5th Cir. 1998)</a>, in
dealing with a claim by Texas for the cost it paid (on behalf of the debtor) to comply with the
statutory requirement that non-operating wells be plugged. The court granted the state
administrative status for its claim, noting that, "The unplugged unproductive wells operated as
a legal liability on the estate, <i>a liability capable of generating losses in the nature of substantial fines</i> every day the wells remained unplugged." (emphasis added). The court saw the two costs
as a simple trade-off—the debtor could either comply with the law or would be required to pay a
penalty for failing to do so. This was true even if plugging the wells provided no benefit to the
estate; debtors may not ignore the law merely to save the compliance costs for payment to their
other creditors.
</p><p>The rest of the Third Circuit's opinion consists of a series of <i>non sequiturs.</i> The court began by
extensively reviewing the treatment of penalties under the Bankruptcy Act and in the proposals
that led to the Code, but failed to mention until the very end that <i>all</i> of the discussions dealt with
<i>pre-petition</i> penalties. In doing so, the court used the same fallacious reasoning as the Sixth
Circuit had in <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… re First Truck Lines Inc. (U.S. v. Noland),</i> 48 F.3d. 210</a>, <i>rvs'd,</i> <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=…. v. Noland,</i>
517 U.S. 535 (1996)</a>, where the lower court had been so taken by policy arguments for
subordinating pre-petition tax penalties that it had ignored <i>explicit</i> Code language giving
post-petition tax penalties administrative status. The conflict with the language of the Code is
less stark here, but the need to protect the effectiveness of sanctions relating to police and
regulatory issues is even more crucial than for the purely monetary issues involved with tax
penalties.<small><sup><a href="#3" name="3a">3</a></sup></small>
</p><p>Inexplicably, the Third Circuit court failed to note or distinguish the case of <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… States Dept.
of Interior v. Elliott,</i> 761 F.2d 168, 171-172 (4th Cir. 1985)</a>. That case <i>did</i> deal with
post-petition penalties under the Bankruptcy Act and noted that the Supreme Court had already
twice held that the language relied upon by the Third Circuit in this case (§57(j) of the Act)
was <i>not</i> applicable to post-petition tax penalties. <i>Elliott</i> concluded that the same logic applied to
non-tax penalties as well and granted them administrative status. Thus, upon even cursory
examination, the historical support on which the Third Circuit built its opinion simply
crumbles away.
</p><p>Next, the court pointed to the distinction in §523(a)(7) between compensatory and punitive
fines and suggested that this showed that Congress, as a general principle, distinguishes between
the two. The reasoning, however, is difficult to follow. To begin with, §523(a)(7) is not even
applicable to a corporate debtor. However, the Third Circuit apparently believed that the state
should not have sanctioned the company, but should instead have sought criminal penalties
against "responsible individuals." Even aside from the difficulties in trying to prove who gave
the orders to dump the waste, this approval ignores the fact that it was the <i>debtor's</i> operations
that benefited from violating the law, and that creditors could hope to receive more from those
operations if the reduced costs helped the debtor to reorganize. It is hardly unfair, in this light,
to have the impact of the violation fall on those two groups. <i>See, i.e., Elliott;</i> <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… re Charlesbank
Laundry Inc.,</i> 755 F.2d 200, 203 (1st Cir. 1985)</a>.
</p><p>The potential breadth of the court's opinion is disconcerting. At times, the Third Circuit seemed
to limit its views to criminal fines or chapter 7 cases. Elsewhere, though, it treated the two
chapters alike and its repeated references to "non-compensatory" penalties could apply equally
to civil and criminal fines. Thus, the opinion could be read to rule out any ability of the
government to give teeth to post-petition sanctions, leaving a gaping hole in the state's
enforcement authority. Indeed, in the worst case, a debtor that was financially troubled <i>because</i> of the costs of obeying the law could file bankruptcy, stop complying and start saving money,
then rest securely, knowing that penalties imposed during the case would be thrown into the
general distribution pool when—and if—it ever confirmed a plan. Worst of all, this is true, no
matter <i>how</i> egregious the debtor's conduct—the Third Circuit actually asserted that because
these violations involved safety issues, that was <i>more</i> reason to find they weren't
administrative (because, of course, no "legitimate" business would do anything so reckless).
Alice-in-Wonderland logic, indeed! The court even suggested that the Eleventh Circuit might
have agreed with it in <i>N.P. Mining</i> had the violations there involved safety issues—although it is
clear from <i>N.P.</i> that the Eleventh Circuit only struggled with the case <i>because</i> the violations did
not create safety issues.
</p><p>The Third Circuit was right, though, about one thing: The language in §507(a)(1)(A) doesn't
really do the trick with non-traditional costs. The problem is bad enough with tort claims; it is
even more difficult with respect to statutory compliance costs. Those costs often may <i>not</i>
provide any direct benefit to the estate. Employees must be paid something, for instance—but is
it really necessary to pay them the minimum wage if they can be induced to work for less? Does
it "benefit" the estate to install expensive safety equipment just because the law says so? If my
employees are careful, isn't this cost unnecessary? Obviously, applying the traditional
"benefit" tests to legally required costs doesn't make much sense. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… U.S.C. §959(b)</a> says
debtors must obey the law—whether or not doing so helps them reorganize and whether or not it
costs money. Put another way, a business that cannot obey the law and still operate profitably
cannot and should not continue. Congress makes that economic decision when it passes legislation
that imposes costs on businesses; bankruptcy does not give debtors immunity from those policy
choices.
</p><p>Pennsylvania is seeking <i>certiorari</i> on <i>Tri-State,</i> and the states hope that the clear circuit split
will catch the court's interest and result in a reversal of the decision. Regardless of the outcome
of that petition, though, the most helpful change would be for Congress to amend the definition of
administrative expenses as part of the pending revisions to the Code. The issue doesn't have the
high profile of the consumer bankruptcy issues that have dominated the debate over the last two
years, but it is of far more importance in ensuring that bankruptcy does not become the haven
for the lawlessness that Congress has long decried.
</p><hr>
<h3>Footnotes</h3>
<p><small><sup><a name="1">1</a></sup></small> The Ninth Circuit can probably also be added. In <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&vr=1.0&cite=… v. Witcosky (In re Allen Care Centers Inc.),</i> 96 F.3d. 1328 (9th Cir. 1994)</a>, it refused to grant
administrative status to the state's costs for closing a failing nursing home pursuant to a state law that allowed a financially troubled operator to transfer
facilities to the state. The court held that the costs were not administrative expenses <i>because</i> the debtor did not violate the law. Under its analysis, <i>Reading</i> only applied to situations where the debtor's conduct involved wrongful, tort-like conduct. While I find that view of <i>Reading</i> overly restrictive, at a minimum it
should mean that if the debtor <i>does</i> violate the law, then the costs arising out of that violation would receive administrative status. <a href="#1a">Return to article</a>
</p><p><small><sup><a name="2">2</a></sup></small> It is difficult to fathom the court's point about laws being meant to protect the public that the operators are part of. If this was meant to imply that those
persons would not violate the law because doing so could expose themselves to harm, it ignores the reality that the harm caused will probably <i>not</i> affect the
wrongdoers. <i>They</i> are not the municipal workers who will be sprayed with blood, nor will they, in all likelihood, live near the municipal landfill contaminated with
infectious wastes. Rather, the burden of the debtor's actions falls on those unable to protect themselves—those whom state law seeks to protect and who
are left defenseless by this ruling. <a href="#2a">Return to article</a>
</p><p><small><sup><a name="3">3</a></sup></small> The court noted that tax penalties were explicitly mentioned in §507 and argued that this implied that other penalties should <i>not</i> receive such status. However, this distinction could equally have been made because Congress thought the language in §959 and the need to protect police and regulatory sanctions made those issues easy, but that it might be a harder sell to convince courts to protect the state's purely pecuniary interest in tax penalties, so specific language was needed. <a href="#3a">Return to article</a>