The Antithesis of Transparency - 90 Day Wait For Public Hearing Transcripts for Chrysler and Other Chapter 11 Cases, Such as Asbestos Bankruptcies

PACER is a great resource, and I am one of the many who are delighted it exists. But the absence of transparency in chapter 11 cases causes me to join with the numerous critics of PACER's ongoing flaws, many of which are well described and collected by Tim Lee at ars technica in an April 2009 online article. I also join with policy groups at Princeton and elsewhere which Mr. Lee identifies as arguing for the government to get out of the way with respect to matters of public interest and let the private sector provide information dissemination when the government does not handle dissemination well.

One of the flaws in PACER was particularly apparent this past week in the Chrysler bankruptcy, and also is a flaw of most chapter 11 proceedings. That flaw is the absence of quickly and freely available transcripts of bankruptcy court hearings in chapter 11 cases. The absence of transparency is particurly inappropriate in a case like Chrysler that is of great interest to hundreds of thousands or millions of people and businesses. The absence of immediate public hearing transcripts is especially ironic when the Obama administration has frequently and rightly announced that transparency in government is essential. One would think that policy could and should be carried over to major chapter 11 cases in general, and especially to a case the President has declared is of tremendous public importance.

What is the situation with respect to hearing transcripts? In PACER, the docket for this and most every other chapter 11 case is marked to indicate that a particular day's hearing transcript will not become publicly available for 90 days to allow time for redaction of personal information.

Why are transcripts not immediately available? An online Powerpoint from the federal courts explains that the delay in public access to transcripts is a function of judicial efforts to comply with a federal statute intended protect against disclosure of social security numbers, bank account numbers, and other similar personal information. Here is an example policy from one of the federal courts. The gist of the policy is that transcripts are embargoed from the online public docket until there has been an opportunity for parties to the case to request redaction of personal information, with the entire cumbersome process given an absurdly long 90 days. That extreme amount of delay is especially ironic when Chrysler has time and again announced that it intends to be in and out of chapter 11 in less than 90 days. A cynic night suggest that many of the players involved in chapter 11 cases do not want real transparency

Whatever the utility of the 90 days of delay policy may be in Chapter 7 cases filed by individuals, the policy plainly is irrelevant and counterproductive when applied to a Chapter 11 cases, especially ones of national significance. Worse yet, the absence of transcripts promotes secrecy and makes it harder for academics and other disinterested individuals to monitor government (court) actions that amy have a profound effect on millions of individuals. Indeed, as S. Todd Brown points out in his great 2008 law review article on asbestos bankruptcies, transparency is supposed to be paramount in bankruptcy cases, but is woefully lacking in reality:

"Throughout the history of bankruptcy law, transparency has been viewed as an essential element in maintaining confidence in the system. Although "[t]here is a strong presumption and public policy in favor of public access to court records" generally, "[t]he public interest in openness of court proceedings is at its zenith when issues concerning the integrity and transparency of bankruptcy court proceedings are involved[.]" Of course, transparency is not only a question of access to public records but also the open disclosure of critical information in those records. As Judge Bohm recently noted, "in order for the bankruptcy system to function . . . every entity involved in a bankruptcy proceeding must fully disclose all relevant facts." This mirrors the First Circuit's emphasis on full disclosure by debtors in bankruptcy:

The [bankruptcy] statutes are designed to insure that complete, truthful, and reliable information is put forward at the outset of the proceedings, so that decisions can be made by the parties in interest based on fact rather than fiction. As we have stated, the successful functioning of the bankruptcy act hinges both upon the bankrupt's veracity and his willingness to make full disclosure. Neither the trustee nor the creditors should be required to engage in a laborious tug-of-war to drag the simple truth into the glare of daylight. In short, the integrity of the bankruptcy process demands transparency both in disclosure and open public records." (footnotes omitted)

So, how to make transcripts available quickly and cause real transparency for chapter 11 cases? The easy answer of course is for the federal courts to implement an exception to the general rule for redaction, and to permit/require automatic and more or less instantaneous release of hearing transcripts in Chapter 11 cases through either PACER or private information sources not unlike the "news pool feeds" used for other public matters. This exception and rule could and should apply to, for example, any chapter 11 cases involving any publicly-traded company or any bankrupcty estate with assets of over $ XXX. Hearings in cases of real magnitude are not spent talking about social security numbers or bank account numbers, and so much-needed sunshine should be applied to the hearings.

Another obstacle might be put up by court reporters complaining that making free transcripts available online will deprive them of income. The easy answer to that problem is to require the bankruptcy estate to pay the relevant court reporter a fee that provides ample returns for their work, but without a windfall. Large bankruptcy estates already pay tens of millions of dollars in fees to lawyers and other professionals, so paying court reporter fees should be a non issue.

As a partial fix for the problem, the court's website has a page mentioning that the Chrysler case is being used as a test for making available through Pacer online audio recordings of the proceedings. That's a good idea, and certainly worth continuing. But, that's not a real answer nor is it an effective means for causing effective transparency. Why? Because audio transcripts are far less useful than our paper transcripts. Why is audio far less useful? Because an audio transcript takes many hours to listen through in contrast to the ability to quickly scan through a transcript and/or run boolean word searches against a searchable transcript to find the name of the party of interest or the legal issue of interest.

In sum, transparency in chapter 11 cases is deeply impeded by the needlessly overbroad rules delaying - for 90 days - access to hearing transcripts from chapter 11 cases. The Obama Administration is rightly anxious to achieve transparency in government, and should act to fix the problem quickly. The problem could be fixed for the Chrysler case in about 5 minutes by asking Judge Gonzalez to issue an order requiring the estate to immediately post in PACER complete, searchable hearing transcripts. For the rest of the bankruptcy court system, the same sort of order can and should be issued in all chapter 11 cases involving public companies or section 524(g) of the bankruptcy code.

Update - Upcoming US Trial for Claims by Nigerians Against Shell Under the Alien Tort Statute and the Torture Victim Protection Act

A May 29, 2009 law.com article by Mark Hamblett updates on this case. The update provides some additional legal commentary and indicates jury selection was delayed this week, perhaps for settlement talks.

______________________________________________
A May 7, 2009 Law.com article by Mark Hamblett from the New York Law Joournal describes an upcoming trial for a fascinating "crimes against humanity" case against Shell by Nigerians. To whet your appetite, here are some exceprts from the article:

"A federal judge has cleared one of the last obstacles to a May trial for families of Nigerian environmental activists who are seeking to hold a Dutch oil company liable for violations of international law committed by the Nigerian military government.

In what will be one of the first times, if not the first time, that a corporation goes on trial for crimes against humanity, Southern District of New York Judge Kimba Wood rejected all but one motion to dismiss by Shell Petroleum, N.V. and other defendants in Wiwa v. Royal Dutch Petroleum, 96 Civ. 8386 and Wiwa v. Anderson, 01 Civ. 1909.

The claim alleges that executed Nigerian writer Ken Saro-Wiwa and other activists were the victims of a campaign of terror launched by the Nigerian government because they fought oil exploration in the Ogoni region of Nigeria. The company, the plaintiffs allege, was complicit in the 1995 hanging of Saro-Wiwa and other activists and the torture, jailing and ultimate exile of Saro-Wiwa's brother, Dr. Owens Wiwa.

Filed under the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) and the Torture Victim Protection Act, the complaints in the two cases contend that the defendants, Shell Petroleum, N.V., recruited Nigerian police and military to attack villages and crush opposition to the company's development in the region. While the plaintiffs are seeking to hold the company vicariously liable, they are attempting to hold directly liable Brian Anderson, the head of the company's Nigerian operation.

Jury selection in the case is expected to begin May 26."

Update: The Difficulties of Managing Contingent Liabilities - Now James Hardie Is Hit with the Burden of $ 14 Million Verdict for Antitrust Violations

The Australian version of the WSJ has an interesting article by a McKinnsey consultant writing about corporate reputation risk, with the article somewhat tied back to James Hardie. An interesting read.

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Contingent liabilities are not easy to manage, as exmplified by this month's events for James Hardie. To begin with, its business is down due to the housing slump. Them its directors this month lost their trial on securities law violations regarding disclosures related to its asbestos trust, and its asbestos trust announced it is underfunded at present. Now comes the word that former subsidiaries of the the company lost a $ 14 million antitrust verdict in Chile, and that Hardie has idemnification obligations for the verdict due to terms of prior m & a transactions. According to the same article, the company has set May 20 to release numbers for its fiscal year end, which was as of March 30.


All of the above is tough enough. Now consider various other implications. One wonders, for example, whether some or all of these events have caused defaults on loan covenants for corporate financing. Even if there are no present defaults, one must wonder what its lenders will be thinking when the company next seeks access to capital or loan markets. Consider also that it will at some point probably need insurance renewals, including d & o coverage. Overall, the point is that contingent liabilities are tough to manage, and the success (or not) of risk managers may be critical to the future of a company.

Connecticut Brief in Chrysler Illustrates Why Manville/Travelers is So Important

A decision is expected tomorrow after the briefs and argument flowied all last week in Chrysler. In a nutshell, the battle seems to boil down to how much the sale order will or will not do to give the buyer entity the future comfort and protection provided by a federal bankrupcty court order/injunction limiting future claims. For example, will the buyer entitiy obtain the injunctive protection it wants to protect itself from the expenses of product laibility claims arising from products sold by " old Chrsyler"? If so, that order will completely contradict state tort law rules that allow successor liability to be imposed on successor entities that assume control of and the financial benfeits of a prior manufacturing operation that it is out of existences and/or insolvent. Likewise, will "old" and "new" Chrysler " obtain the order they want to enjoin future fraudulent conveyance claims asseting that too little money has been left behind for creditors?


Various objectors have weighed in on the issues, and oppose an order granting the buyer protection against future product liability claims. The objectors include all product liability claimants. Another one is the State of Connecticut. It's opening statement, docket # 2567, builds from its objection. The following is the text of the obecjtionn, but with footnotes omitted and emphasis added:



OPENING STATEMENT OF THE STATE OF CONNECTICUT

The State of Connecticut (the "State") by Richard Blumenthal, Attorney General (the "Attorney General"), and through its undersigned counsel, respectfully submits this opening statement with respect to its Joinder, Limited Objection, and Reservation of Rights filed May 23, 2009 [Docket No 1976] (the "Objection").

This court should not enter any order depriving purchasers of Chrysler vehicles of legal rights to be compensated for death or serious injuries caused by defects in Chrysler products. Any such order would be unfair, in violation of due process, and inconsistent with the public assertions by the President of the United States and the Debtor that consumers who buy Chrysler products have no cause for concern.


The State has objected to the Debtors' motion for an Order authorizing the sale of substantially all of the Debtors' assets free and clear of liens, claims, interests and encumbrances
(the "Sale"). This objection raises two concerns: (1) the proposed rejection of product liability claims for vehicles sold pre-closing; and (2) the proposed rejection of all future claims based on theories of transferee or successor liability for vehicles sold pre-closing.

On the first point, the State joins in the Objection of The Ad Hoc Committee of Consumer-Victims of Chrysler LLC (the "Ad Hoc Committee") in its Limited Objection to Motion for an Order Authorizing the Sale of Substantially all of the Debtors' Assets Free and Clear of Liens, Claims, Interests and Encumbrances and Reservation of Rights of the Ad Hoc Committee of Consumer-Victims of Chrysler LLC [doc. id 1192] (the "Consumer Objection"). As the Ad Hoc Committee argues in the Consumer Objection, and the State argues by reference in its Objection, Section 363(f) simply does not permit the sale free and clear of "claims," even though it does permit the sale free and clear of "liens."

With respect to the State's second issue, due process principles do not allow the sale to New Chrysler "free and clear" of future, presently unknown claims. Fiat's argument that the "the number and variety of objections that have been filed demonstrates that notice of the proposed sale has been disseminated widely," (Docket No. 2111 at 11) is unfounded. Consumers who are unaware that they may have product liability claims in the future could not possibly recognize the need to review or respond to a notice about those not-yet-existing claims now.

This situation cannot be what the Department of the Treasury and the United States government intended when they provided substantial financial assistance to the Debtors. It also appears to be directly at odds with President Obama's statement on March 30, 2009:
But just in case there's still nagging doubts, let me say it as plainly as I can: If you buy a car from Chrysler or General Motors, you will be able to get your car serviced and repaired, just like always. Your warranty will be safe. In fact, it will be safer than it's ever been, because starting today, the United States government will stand behind your warranty.

Remarks by the President on the American Automotive Industry, March 30, 2009.


Presumably, consumers presently purchasing new Chrysler vehicles are not being informed that they may have no claim under product liability law for any harm they may suffer as the result of a defective Chrysler vehicle. Thus, Fiat's argument that the publicity of the proposed sale satisfies due process is unavailing. Unknowing consumers are still buying Chrysler vehicles with no indication that future injuries caused by a defect in those vehicles will not be a liability of New Chrysler. Injuries caused by automobile defects can be devastating. The medical bills, loss of income, severe disability, or most tragically, loss of life are difficult enough to bear. This court should block the Debtors from erecting another unconscionable burden -- litigating whether this Court has the authority to approve the Sale free and clear of product liability claims. New Chrysler should be clearly liable under a theory of successor liability, among others.

Consumers purchasing Chrysler products today do not know that they may not have the legal rights enjoyed by purchasers of other cars concerning life threatening defects. Congress cannot have intended to eviscerate such rights when it enacted Section 363, nor what the Treasury had in mind when it loaned the Debtors billions of taxpayer dollars. Accordingly, the State urges this Court, if it is inclined to allow the Sale, to do so subject to the retention of product liability claims.
Dated: Hartford, Connecticut
May 26, 2009
STATE OF CONNECTICUT
RICHARD BLUMENTHAL,
ATTORNEY GENERAL
By: /s/ Denise Mondell
Denise Mondell (DM-8434)
Matthew F. Fitzsimmons
Assistant Attorneys General
Office of the Attorney General
State of Connecticut
55 Elm Street
Hartford, CT 06106
Phone: (860) 808-5150
Fax: (860) 808-5383

UK Update

An article on the BBC and an article on Scotsman.com report that trial has started on the insurance indsutry challenge to Scotland's recent legislation reallowing lawsuits seeking compensation for pleural plaques. According to the articles, trial is expected to end by June 12.



Meanwhile, London still has not announced a decision on pleural plauqes but campaigning about asbestos medical research continues to grow. A May 25 article reports that 22,000 Brits signed a petition to Downing Street to request a central medical authority to lead research efforts regarding mesothelioma, and yet another article reports on two lawyers and another person embarking on a 1,200 mile bike marathon aimed at encouraging medical research, with the journey to be chronicled on a blog.

Article Attacks Congress' Costly Asbestos Mistake: The Bankruptcy Code Section That Gives Plaintiff's Lawyers Veto Power Over Asbestos Bankruptcies

S. Todd Brown of Temple University has written an insightful law review article desribing in detail Congress' incredibly costly error in creating the bankruptcy code section (524(g)) with terms that have turned out to give a very small number of plaintiff's law firms "veto power" over asbestos-related chapter 11 plans. Strengths of the article include crisp writing, a great collection and distillation of relevant facts not well known to outsiders, cogent legal cites, and a logical organizational sequence that adds to the article's persuasive impact. The article is titled: Section 524 (g) Without Compromise: Voting Rights and the Asbestos Bankruptcy Paradox (Colum. Bus. L. Rev. (forthcoming 2008). The article is available on SSRN. Apparently the article is being published at 2008 Colum. Bus. L. Rev. # 3, at 841 but that link only takes you to an image of the cover of the law review.

I'm trying to figure out why the article has not been more widely publicized to date. Indeed, I found the article by accident while looking at results from a Google search for the cite for another article on section 524(g). When I Googled the article, all I found it mentioned in were mundane collections of lists of law review articles, and a slightly more extensive post on the Mass Tort Litigation Blog, with the post showing the article title and the abstract.

Various quotes and points from the article will soon show up here, but don't wait - go get and read the article if you are involved in asbestos litigation in particular or mass tort claiming in general.

Chrysler Update - Asbestos Plaintiffs' Objection to Asset Sale Once Again Demonstrates the Importance of the Manville/Travelers Case at SCOTUS

The objection lodged in the Chrysler proceedings by a representative for asbestos plaintiffs, Ms. Pascale, once again illustrates the importance of the issues to be decided in the Manville/Travelers case awaiting a US Supreme Court decision on the scope of bankruptcy court jurisdiction. Specifically, paragraph 8 of the pleading sets out the following objection regarding the scope of injunctions that may be issued by they Chrysler bankruptcy court:

[5] "The Sale Transaction, including any affiliated agreements and
proposals, provides for releases of, or injunctions in favor of,
non-Debtor third parties, outside of a plan of reorganization and
to the detriment of unsecured creditors as a whole and tort
claimants in particular."


Full Text of All Objections by Ms. Pascale:

Less than self-evident on the docket, the pleading is docket number 1175, filed May 19. The objection in itself is quite brief as it consists of only nine numbered paragraphs. Ms. Pascale is identified in paragraphs 5 and 6 as the widow of an individual who allegedly died from mesothelioma, with a wrongful death action pending in California in Los Angeles as case number BC 345910, and a trial date of June 15, 2009.

In paragraph 8 of the objection, Ms. Pascale sets out the following six objections (but with numbers added by me for ease of reference):

Mrs. Pascale objects to the 363 Motion on the following grounds:


1) The 363 Motion purports to grant successor liability protections
to New Chrysler from asbestos personal injury and wrongful
death claims, but the 363 Motion fails to comply with the
statutory requirements of 11 U.S.C. § 524(g).


2) As currently structured, sale of substantially all of Chrysler's
assets constitutes an impermissible sub rosa plan of
reorganization and includes various releases, assumptions and
discriminatory treatment which would be prohibited in a plan.


3) The 363 Motion does not specify what will happen to tort claims
like Mrs. Pascale's. Such claims are not listed among the
Assumed Liabilities that Fiat will assume. The Debtors should
be required to explain how tort claims will be treated and what
assets, if any, will be available for payment of tort claims if the
Sale Transaction is approved and consummated.


4) The Sale Transaction, including any related ancillary
agreements, as currently structured, allocates proceeds and
consideration of the sale disproportionately in favor of certain
unsecured creditors to the detriment of other, similarly situated
unsecured creditors, including Mrs. Pascale, and is not in the
best interests of unsecured creditors as a whole.


5) The Sale Transaction, including any affiliated agreements and
proposals, provides for releases of, or injunctions in favor of,
non-Debtor third parties, outside of a plan of reorganization and
to the detriment of unsecured creditors as a whole and tort
claimants in particular.


6) Chrysler has not met and cannot meet its burden to
demonstrate that the sale of substantially all of its assets as
contemplated by the 363 Motion satisfies all of the requirements
of 11 U.S.C. § 363 and General Order M-331 of this Court.




Naming and Politics in Chapter 11 Cases: It's interesting to watch the politics and gamesmanship in bankruptcy court. As previously covered here on this blog, the asbestos objector constituency was officially recognized by The Office of the US Trustee and given a seat on the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors as shown at docket number 366. Moreover, Chrysler's asbestos issues are no secret to analysts or others, and finally started being mentioned in public articles around May 6.

One might then think that Ms. Pascale might readily identify use the title of her pleading to readily identify the constituency she represents. But, the title of the objection does not on its face reveal the reality that the objection is being asserted by an asbestos claimant, and instead bears the ponderous title:


OBJECTION OF UNSECURED CREDITORS COMMITTEE MEMBER,
PATRICIA PASCALE, TO MOTION OF DEBTORS AND DEBTORS IN
POSSESSION, PURSUANT TO SECTIONS 105, 363 AND 365 OF THE
BANKRUPTCY CODE AND BANKRUPTCY RULES 2002, 6004 AND 6006,
FOR (I) AN ORDER (A) APPROVING BIDDING PROCEDURES AND
BIDDER PROTECTIONS FOR THE SALE OF SUBSTANTIALLY ALL OF
THE DEBTORS' ASSETS AND (B) SCHEDULING A FINAL SALE
HEARING AND APPROVING THE FORM AND MANNER OF NOTICE
THEREON; AND (II) AN ORDER (A) AUTHORIZING THE SALE OF
SUBSTANTIALLY ALL OF THE DEBTORS' ASSETS, FREE AND CLEAR
OF LIENS, CLAIMS, INTERESTS AND ENCUMBRANCES, (B)
AUTHORIZING THE ASSUMPTION AND ASSIGNMENT OF CERTAIN
EXECUTORY CONTRACTS AND UNEXPIRED LEASES IN CONNECTION
THEREWITH AND RELATED PROCEDURES, AND
(C) GRANTING CERTAIN RELATED RELIEF

Asbest: The Russian Town that Is All About Producing Asbestos and the Dangers of Amphibole Fibers

A May 5, 2009 Slate article by Shaun Walker is about Russian towns that revolve around one industry. Such towns, he says, are known as monogorods. As it happens, he chose to write about the monogorod town of Asbest.


The article caught my eye for two reasons. One is the scope of the industry - according to Mr. Walker:

"There are 19 different factories and workshops that make up UralAsbest, the company that defines the town, he told me, and more than 70 percent of the families living in the town have at least one member who works there. He handed me an English-language brochure called "Asbestos Saves Lives."

The other noteworthy point is the town/industry's focus on the controversies over the toxicity of various types of asbestos fibers, and short, glib answers to complex questions. Plaintiff's lawyers hate to admit it, but the reality is that amphibole fibers (usually crocidolite or amosite) are by all accounts far more "toxic" than are chrysotile fibers. That said, some chrysotile fibers from some mines are "tainted" by amphibole fibers. The subtlies, however, usally are not discussed, as is the case in ths town of Asbest:

Kholzyakov sat back in his chair and let out a long sigh. "The thing is, amphibole asbestos, which was used in Europe, really was dangerous. But we mine chrysotile asbestos here, which is perfectly safe. It's only because companies in the West have made expensive substitutes that there is a campaign to ban us."

The party line in Asbest jibes well with a Pravda item on asbestos use. The full text of the article is below with the first three items reaaranged to appear at the top of the list. Bear in mind this is from the English version of Pravda.
http://english.pravda.ru/science/19/94/377/16671_world.html


10 myths of the past, which never materialized.

Environmental pollution: some people feared that the civilization would come to end by 2020 due to sky-high levels of industrial and communal pollution which should result in a lack of oxygen and poisonous evaporation.

Asbestos: Micro particles of asbestos cause lung cancer. Asbestos was produced in Canada and the USSR. Canadian asbestos companies went bankrupt following an anti-asbestos propaganda campaign instigated by the competitors. Russia's asbestos makers have survived the bad times. The incidence rate of cancer in the town of Asbest does not exceed an average national incidence rate of cancer.

Global warming: industrial emissions of carbon dioxide cause the greenhouse effect that leads to overheating of the earth's surface. Consequently, polar ice will melt away causing the global ocean level rise by one meter.

Steam-driven locomotive: serious scientists were asserting that cows would stop bearing offspring and produce milk at the sight of a locomotive. They also clamed that air would be squeezed out of train carriages at 20 km per hour and passengers will suffocate as a result.

Robot: intelligent machines will shake off dependence and take command of the world; humans would submit to the power of the machines.

Spacecraft: spacecraft were making holes in the atmosphere during the takeoff; the earth's protective anti-radiation layer of the atmosphere will be eventually destroyed and thus the earth will be exposed to dangerous space particles.

Microwave oven: fried sausages can irradiate in the dark; radiation from food cooked in the oven will pile up in the human body and cause cancer.

Cell phone: radiation emitted by a cell phone receiver can affect the brain by liquefying it. Paradoxically, a cell phone phobia could not stop the massive spread of cellular communications all over the world.

Vaccination: the danger of vaccination is one of the longstanding fears in the world; the first objectors appeared shortly after the first vaccination campaign launched by Dr. Edward Jenner in 1796; many objected to vaccination in Russia at the end of the 1990s.

Sign Up Tomorrow for Great Looking UCLA - RAND Conference on Litigation Funding - June 2, 2009 in Santa Monica

My friend Steve Sellick points out that UCLA and RAND are teaming up and presenting an interesting June 2 seminar at RAND in Santa Monica on litigation funding. As I've mentioned before in a Corporate Counsel "special section "article and on this blog, the existence of material amounts of capital available for litigation funding is in my opinion a huge development in and driver for litigation.of all kinds, ranging from intellectual property to securities class actions to mass tort personal injury claiming. Moreover, this trend is only going to accelerate as the UK's legal reforms will soon (not later than 2011) allow direct outside investment in UK law firms.

The UCLA-RAND seminar speakers include some significant academics and a former President of the British Bar. An online invitation to the seminar is available here . Attendance is free, but advance registration is required by May 25, it says. The academic speakers include UCLA's Prof. Stephen C. Yeazell and Lynn M. LoPucki. I would love to attend but family activities dictate other priorities. Hopefully the papers will be published online after the conference. Sponsors include litigation funders Juridica, IM Litigation Funding and Oxbridge, with the latter explicitly saying on its website that it funds mesothelioma claims.

Professor LoPucki is well-known for his many papers on bankruptcy economics, including attorneys' fees. Even more interesting for me is Professor Yeazell because he is the author of wonderful 2001 law review article I cite time and again in discussions regarding the how and why of the nature of our litigation system in the United States. The paper was delivered as part of a seminar sponsored annually by one of Chicago's most respected plaintiffs lawyers, Robert Clifford. The paper is titled:

SYMPOSIUM ARTICLE: THE CHANGING LANDSCAPE OF THE PRACTICE, FINANCING AND ETHICS OF CIVIL LITIGATION IN THE WAKE OF THE TOBACCO WARS: Seventh Annual Clifford Symposium on Tort Law and Social Policy: RE-FINANCING CIVIL LITIGATION , 51 DePaul L. Rev. 183. The paper can be downloaded from this site.

Back to the seminar - the invitation describes the seminar as follows.

"RAND Institute for Civil Justice and UCLA School of Law recently forged a new initiative through which they identify and analyze the biggest and most influential trends in civil justice. One such trend--litigation claim transfer (also referred to as third party litigation funding)--has created the environment for litigation claim transfer to be evaluated as a component of the American civil justice system. The confluence of the recent credit shortage, the enormity of the overall market for legal services, and the search for investment opportunities unrelated to general economic risk has created the supreme environment for litigation claim transfer to expand and thrive.

UCLA-RAND Center for Law and Public Policy is bringing together stakeholders to not only discuss this phenomenon, but to frame how it is debated in government, law schools and state bars across the country. We are pleased to invite you to attend a conference designed to address these important issues on June 2, 2009 at RAND's Santa Monica headquarters. "

Reminder That GIT Asbestos Bankruptcy Argument is Tomorrow in Pittsburgh

Please see the prior post for information on why this case matters for mass tort lawyers concerned about the scope of the injunctions in asbestos bankruptcy cases.

Response to Question Regarding Whether the Chrysler Bankruptcy Causes a Stay of Underlying Tort Cases as to All Defendants

A comment/question was posed under yesterday's post about the asbestos issues bubbling up in the Chrsyler case. The question is whether the Chrsyler bankruptcy would cause a stay of all underlying asbestos cases as against all defendants. The question is interesting and again underscores the importance of what the US Supreme Court has to say in Travelers/Manville about the scope of bankruptcy court jurisdiction. The short answer is that the bankruptcy code's automatic stay provisions do not stay cases against co-defendants, and adverse existing precedent would have to be overcome to obtain a stay for all defendants based on "related to" jurisdiction in the bankruptcy court.

The "related to" precedent arises from Federal-Mogul's chapter 11 petition filed October 1, 2001. Soon thereafter, some car makers sought to use the FM proceedings as the forum to hold a global Daubert hearing on whether friction products can cause asbestos-related disease. Among other things, there were arguments that the bankruptcy court could exert "related to" jurisdiction based on express or implied indemnity claims that might be asserted against FM by other entities involved with friction products, and various arguments about the inter-related nature of the friction product claims. The asbestos plaintiff's bar vigorously opposed that approach.

Judge Wolin denied the effort, concluding that he lacked jurisdiction. The 3rd Circuit declined to reverse him based on issues regarding its appellate jurisdiction. For a complete synopsis of the issues and rulings from the Crowell & Moring lawyers who have for years represented insurers in asbestos bankrutcies, go here. The 3rd Circuit's opinion, In re Federal-Mogul Global, Inc., 300 F.3d 368 (3rd Cir. 2002) provides the following brief synopsis:

" In re Federal-Mogul Global, Inc., No. 01-10587, 2002 Bankr.LEXIS 105, *4-5 (Bankr.D.Del. Feb. 8, 2002) (hereinafter, Feb. 8 Order). The District Court's written opinion supplementing the order was issued on February 15, 2002. In re Federal-Mogul Global, Inc., No. 01-10578 et al., slip op. (Bankr.D.Del. Feb. 15, 2002) (hereinafter, Feb. 15 Op.).

The District Court held that it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction because the claims against the Friction Product Defendants were not "related to" the Federal-Mogul bankruptcy proceedings. The court found it unlikely that "Congress ... intended that the bankruptcy of a single player [in a multi-player industry] would have automatic, nation-wide impact in which every manufacturer and distributor and all tens of thousands of injured parties are concentrated in a single reorganization proceeding." Feb. 15 Op. at 16. Specifically, the District Court found that under this court's influential decision in Pacor, Inc. v. Higgins (In re Pacor), 743 F.2d 984 (3d Cir.1984), "related-to bankruptcy jurisdiction [does] not extend to a dispute between non-debtors unless that dispute, by itself, creates at least the logical possibility that the estate will be affected." Id. at 17.

The District Court noted that Pacor made clear that there is no "related to" jurisdiction over a personal injury claim *376 against a non-debtor "without the filing and adjudication of a separate claim for indemnification" against the debtor. Id. at 18. Further, the District Court observed that "cases since Pacor have failed to endorse the proposition that any contract of indemnification will support an extension of related-to jurisdiction." Id. at 22 (emphasis in original)."

Chrysler's Asbestos Bankruptcy Issues Are Finally Being Mentioned in Public

Update: Yet another article mentions asbestos and provides some big picture facts and thinking. In states, among other things:

"The 60 days projected by the President at an April 30 press conference announcing the automaker's bankruptcy only applies to a sale of Chrysler's best assets to a new entity, said the official, who can't be identified because the matter is confidential. Afterward, creditors would fight over unwanted factories and other assets to recover money, lawyers said.

"The unsold assets and liabilities may take years to sort out due to the complexities of resolving thousands of commercial, tort, future asbestos, dealership and employee claims," said Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP partner Martin Bienenstock, who has advised General Motors Corp. and Chrysler Financial on restructuring.

The bulk of assets left in the old Chrysler will be eight factories, valued by Chrysler at $2.3 billion. Those with claims against them include the U.S. government, provider of a $4.5 billion bankruptcy loan, and lenders with an unpaid balance of $4.9 billion on a secured loan."

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Popular press articles are now starting to mention the reality that the bankruptcy court at some point will have to sort out Chrysler's legacy liability issues, including asbestos claims. A prior post here pointed out that the asbestos plaintiff's bar has a seat on the unsecured creditors' committee and that plaintiff's firm SimmonsCooper filed an appearance in the case early on to protect the interests of its asbestos clients. One would assume that before the May 20 hearing, the unsecured creditor's committee will have something to say about the distribution of the asset sale proceeds and the scope of the order and injunctive terms related to the sale. For example, will the final order regarding the sale include language purporting to immunize Chrysler and Fiat from facing future claims that the asset sale is a conveyance intended to impair collection of claims by unsecured creditors, including tort claimants with non-asbestos claims and those holding asbestos claims ?

Chrysler's legacy liability issues illustrate the importance of the issues presently pending before the US Supreme Court in the Travelers/Manville case. There, the Court has been asked to decide just how far a bankruptcy court can go in enjoining current and future claims, a topic mentioned in this prior post.

Answers to FAQ's Regarding Asbestos Bankruptcies

Time to put in one place some answers to questions I'm repeatedly asked or ask myself. The list will expand over time.



1) Where are Updated Lists of Asbestos Bankruptcy Cases? Believe it or not, you can find online a very useful set of lists of asbestos bankruptcy cases, including citations to published opinions in the cases. This link will take you to this set of lists thoughtfully maintained in public view by a team of bright lawyers at Crowell & Moring. The team is led by Mark Plevin, and represents insurers in many asbestos bankruptcy cases. They kindly provide periodic updates to the lists and post them online. Just go to this page of the Crowell web site and choose the list you want.



2) Where Are Periodic Commentaries Summarizing the Status of Asbestos Bankruptcies ? The Crowell & Moring team also has published a series of five articles with expert commentary on the status of and key issues in asbestos bankruptcy cases. The articles are titled "Where Are They Now" and can be found at the same page as the bankruptcy lists. Reading these summaries provides a great, manageable lesson in how the cases and issues have evolved.



3) How Much Money Do the Asbestos Trusts Have ? This answer is harder because of course the amount keeps changing. As of November, 2006, the answer was: about $ 30 billion. That answer is set out in an excellent article by economists Charlie Bates and Charlie Mullin who lead an expert team at economic consulting firm Bates White. They know the asbestos bankruptcy topic quite thoroughly. The article's title is "Having Your Tort and Eating it Too?"


4) Is Valid Science Applied in Asbestos Bankruptcy "Liability Estimates" ? No, according to a an expert witness report submitted in the W.R. Grace asbestos bankruptcy by Dr. James Heckman, a Nobel Prize winning economist at the University of Chicago. Dr. Heckman's expert witness report is here, along with the brief of the WR Grace shareholder committee that submitted the report in support of Grace's attacks on the estimates offered by other witnesses. The report is a scathing indictment of the lack of science and reliability in the estimation process used in asbestos bankruptcies.
5) What Happened in the Federal-Mogul Bankruptcy Regarding the Efforts to Stay all Underlying Asbestos Cases Against All Friction Defendants? The answer is in this prior post.
6) Where is a Terse Summary of the Babcock & Wilcox Chapter 11 and Report of the $415 Million Settlement with Equitas? At this page of the website of Jenner & Block, counsel for the debtor.

London Delays Its Decision on Pleural Plaques Legislation

This May 12, 2009 post updates a post of Wednesday, April 22, 2009 regarding pleural plaques and asbestos issues in the UK.

The UK press is now reporting that the UK government has now publicly stated that it will not make its decision on pleural plaques legislation until some time prior to Parliament's summer recess. The statement can be seen here in context, but it's brief. The statement says:

"Jack Straw (Lord Chancellor, Ministry of Justice; Blackburn, Labour)

Of course, I fully acknowledge the concern of my hon. Friend and other hon. Members on both sides of the House about that issue. Consideration of the responses, of which we have received quite a number following publication of our paper on the way forward, is taking longer than we anticipated, because of the complexity involved. However, I certainly intend that we should come to conclusions before the summer recess."

Meanwhile, union groups and their supporters have continued to agitate for legislation to once again allow claiming for pleural plaques. A "members bill" was introduced and discussed in Parliament. The discussion can be read here, and reveals that at least some of the legislators are ill-informed on the issues.

My personal opinion is that London will rue the day if it allows plaques claiming to go forward. Plaques claiming in the US was a disaster for companies and Chapter 11 trusts that were swamped by claims from persons with little or no impairment. The April 22 post links to my detailed set of reasons regarding why plaques claiming should not be reinstituted.

Antitrust Law - Revival on the Way

News this morning includes word that the Obama Administration will revive antitrust law and enforcement. Where the government leads, class actions are sure to follow.

(Speaking only as a consumer fresh from purchasing a new cell phone under the bizarre rules and pricing created by the cell phone companies. I'd like to see the cell phone market changed to encourage new telephone retailers from which we could safely buy a relaible phone that will work on any network that uses its type of signal (e.g. GSM). It's ridiculous to either have to sign up for years of service (and ancillary penalties) or pay $ 400 for a phone, epsecially when I can buy a small, web-focused laptop for the same amount.)

Bravo ! Grace and Individual Defendants Acquitted in Libby Asbestos Trial

The NYT article is here.

The prosecution never should have happened - it will be fascinating to watch its dissection.

Update - Madoff, Stanford, UBS, Account Holders & Suits Against Advisers in the Referral Chain

Update: This post updates a Feb. 20 post. The new news is a Law.com article regarding a new Madoff-related lawsuit in Florida naming a feeder fund (Tremont) and KPMG as defendants for alleged failures in due diligence and monitoring of investments placed with Madoff. The same article includes links to yet another article on clawback suits by the Madoff trustee.

According to the Law.com article, the Florida lawsuit includes the following allegations:

"The lawsuit contends a number of red flags should have made Tremont wary of investing with Madoff.

The plaintiffs contend they depended upon the information supplied by Tremont in making their investment decisions and received false reports indicating the value of their investments was steadily rising.

Plaintiffs also said they were led to believe Tremont diversified its investments instead of putting all the money in one basket. The complaint contends Tremont promised clients it would monitor the investments and change the strategy if necessary. The lawsuit contends Tremont would have found the fraud with proper oversight.

Instead of finding problems, however, the complaint said Tremont's Rye Investment Management boasted its funds have "historically displayed steady and consistent performance, especially during market downturns," implying a conservative investment scheme.
The lawsuit also states several plaintiffs reached out to Rye managers about how the funds were doing. A supervisor told one plaintiff that his accounts had not lost value despite market weaknesses last fall. A supervisor told another investor around the same time that the fund had not suffered losses because it was shielded from the subprime crisis.

The plaintiffs also maintain KPMG did not adequately do its job as auditor despite saying it performed its audits to national standards.

"KPMG's audits failed to reveal the fact that the assets reported on each of the Rye funds' financial statements did not actually exist," the plaintiffs stated.

They sued for fraud, securities violations, negligence, negligent misrepresentation, breach of fiduciary duty, breach of contract and professional malpractice, and are seeking a jury trial.

"This is a case about the greed of investment professionals and their auditors taking priority over the most basic adherence to their contract, tort and fiduciary duties," the complaint contends."


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The DOJ's efforts against Stanford and UBS AG are much in the news these days, with a good UBS summary article here and images of DOJ litigation papers available here (look for links in the box on the right hand side.)



The question that occurs to me is: what kind of fall out and follow up lawsuits will emerge? We are seeing in the Madoff situation lots of efforts to pin financial losses and blame on advisers who connected investors to Madoff's enterprise, and thoughts from lawyers at Sonnenschein and elsewhere regarding potential clawback claims by trustees and/or others. One would think the same result will follow here. Some interesting law likely will evolve as to whether or how much one professional has a duty to investigate another before making a recommendation or referral. There are existing claims and case law. See for example a law firm (Brown McCarroll) website article addressing liability of call centers, and an American Bar Association page with links to articles on claims against lawyers for allegedly negligent referrals. This all should make for some fascinating legal wrangling, with global tort choice of law issues.

The situations also may be a boon for multilingual lawyers.

Expanded - Chrysler Bankruptcy - Asbestos and Other Tort Claimants and the Official Committee for Unsecured Creditors - Asbestos Claimants

Expansion: An ad hoc group of non-asbestos tort claimants sought a place on the official committee for unsecured creditors but did not receive a formal seat on the committee. The committee is represented by Schnader Harrison, and is comprised of persons who have filed personal injury lawsuits against Chrysler. The claims are said to worth over $ 600 million. The papers are available at the unofficial online website (link below) as docket items 287 and 273.

Note also that asbestos plaintiffs' firm SimmonsCooper filed an appearance on April 30. The papers are docket items 25, 17 and 13 or are collected here.

Prior: In the Chrysler bankruptcy, the US Trustee's office filed today papers designating the Official Commmittee of Unsecured Creditors. The papers designate a committee member who apparently will represent asbestos claimants because she, Patricia Pascale, is listed through the Brayton Purcell plaintiff's firm in California that handles asbestos claims, among others. The designation states:

Patricia Pascale
c/o Brayton Purcell LLP
222 Rush Landing Rd.
Novato, CA 94948
ATTN: Alan R. Brayton, Esq.
Telephone No. (415) 898-1555
Fax No. (415) 898-1247


An image of the US Trustee's designation paper is available through Chrysler's online copy of the court docket at docket number 366, or here.

Asbestos Litigation Developments, Especially New Article by Mark Behrens

Pointoflaw collected several asbestos events links, some of which come back here.

Of particular note is Mark Behren's new Review of Litigation article: What's New In Asbestos Litigation.

For those who do not know Mark, he is with Shook Hardy in DC and has a great command of asbestos issues. Mark has been active in asbestos issues for a long time, especially legislation. Mark however goes far beyond legislative work to write several material articles. Mark also has given expert testimony in asbestos bankruptcies as to how and why the bankruptcy trust funds are defying state law. Mark is absolutely correct on that point, and that's why asbestos bankruptcy trusts are so much loved by the lawyers for non-impaired claimants. Simply put, they are using the chapter 11 trusts to avoid state law tort reform statutes, and are thereby continuing to collect massive amounts of money for persons who do not have any impairment of their daily activities.

You can obtain the full text of several of Mark's articles at his page on Shook Hardy's website.

Deal Recounts the Long Strange Trip That is the Congoleum Asbestos Bankruptcy

Reuter's picked up a Deal article recounting the long strange trip known as the Congoleoum asbestos bankruptcy. It's well worth reading for those who care about mass tort bankruptcies.

Did Asbestos Fibers and Earthquakes Help Start Life on Earth ??

New Scientist has a brief new online article that poses the question as it builds from an article in a journal titled Astrobiology. The abstract is below for the Astrobiology article that summarizes an experiment testing the hypothesis. ( I love to scuba dive with my two daughters but I'll bet these fissures are too deep for us to do any on-site investigation.)

Abstract
We report the results of our efforts to study the effects of seismic shaking on simulated biofilms within serpentinite fissures. A colloidal solution consisting of recipient bacterial cells (Pseudomonas sp. or Bacillus subtilis), donor plasmid DNA encoded for antibiotic resistance, and chrysotile (an acicular clay mineral that forms in crevices of serpentinite layers) were placed onto an elastic body made from gellan gum, which acted as the biofilm matrix. Silica beads, as rock analogues (i.e., chemically inert mechanical serpentinite), were placed on the gellan surface, which was coated with the colloidal solution. A rolling vibration similar to vibrations generated by earthquakes was applied, and the silica beads moved randomly across the surface of the gellan. This resulted in the recipient cells' acquiring plasmid DNA and thus becoming genetically transformed to demonstrate marked antibiotic resistance. Neither Pseudomonas sp. nor B. subtilis were transformed by plasmid DNA when chrysotile was substituted for by kaolinite or bentonite in the colloidal solution. Tough gellan (1.0%) promoted the introduction of plasmid DNA into Pseudomonas sp., but soft gellan (0.3%) had no such effect. Genetic transformation of bacteria on the surface of gellan by exposure to exogenous plasmid DNA required seismic shaking and exposure to the acicular clay mineral chrysotile. These experimental results suggest that bacterial genetic exchange readily occurs when biofilms that form in crevices of serpentinite are exposed to seismic shaking. Seismic activity may be a key factor in bacterial evolution along with the formation of biofilms within crevices of serpentinite. Key Words: Biofilm--Chrysotile--Evolution--Pseudomonas sp.--Seismic shaking. Astrobiology 9, xxx-xxx

Another WR Grace Defendant Has been Dismissed

The article is here.