New Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Filing - Aldrich Pump LLC

Aldrich Pump LLC

June 18, 2020

Another day, another asbestos-sparked bankruptcy. Man. These things have legs. Aldrich Pump LLC and Murray Boiler LLC are recently formed LLCs spun out of a recent reorganization of Trane Technologies plc, a publicly-traded manufacturer of climate solutions for buildings, homes and transportation (and, via a subsidiary, successor by merger to Ingersoll-Rand Company).

While the debtors don’t mine or use asbestos in manufacturing products, they made industrial products that, in some cases, used asbestos-containing components manufactured and designed by third parties. As a result, the debtors’ have been subject to asbestos litigation going as far back as 1982. Year over year, the debtors now face “thousands upon thousands” of asbestos-related claims. The bankruptcy cases are meant to “…permanently, globally and fairly resolve the asbestos claims….” Here comes another 524(g) trust y’all.

  • Jurisdiction: W.D. of North Carolina (Judge Whitley)

  • Professionals:

    • Legal: Jones Day LLP (Gregory Gordon, Brad Erens, David Torborg, James Jones, Mark Cody, Caitlin Cahow, Genna Ghaul) & Rayburn Cooper & Durham PA

    • Financial Advisor: AlixPartners LLP (Carrianne Basler)

    • Claims Agent: KCC (*click on the link above for free docket access)

🍔New Chapter 11 Filing - SD Charlotte LLC🍔

SD Charlotte LLC

February 7, 2020

SD Charlotte LLC and four affiliates (the “debtors”) filed for bankruptcy on Friday in the Western District of North Carolina. While these are smaller cases than we typically cover here in PETITION, the filing is representative of continued distress in the restaurant space. Why? SD Charlotte LLC is the owner and operator of 73 Sonic Drive-In restaurants, an affiliate is the owner and operator of 14 MOD Pizza restaurants, and another affiliate is the owner and operator of three Fuzzy’s Taco Shop restaurants. In total, the debtors employ 1,900 people and have, as the above numbers might suggest, a large presence in the south east, predominantly in North Carolina.

It’s important to note that the debtors do not indicate that their filing is the result of the various factors we’ve seen in other restaurant filings, i.e., increasing wages, poor leases, VC-backed food delivery services, etc. We can assume, though, that given significant liquidity issues arising almost immediately after the principal franchised the restaurants, that some of these factors were in play. The main issue, however, was the debtors’ debt burden: the debtors appear to have taken on too much debt and expanded too quickly in a difficult environment for restaurants; they have $22.3mm of pre-petition secured debt — a figure that the debtors acknowledge, in their filing, exceeds the value of the debtors’ assets. Ruh roh. 😬

Liquidity has been an issue for the debtors from their inception in 2017. In late 2018, the debtors had to turn to “factors” for liquidity. What the bloody hell is a “factor”? Glad you asked…

A factoring counter-party offers upfront cash payments for future receivables. Said another way, a factor will pay a discounted cash price today and take on the risk of non-payment in exchange for greater cash payments in the near future. To protect, their interest in those future receivables, the factors should obtain a security interest in those receivables and take the proper steps to record those security interests.* The debtors entered into at least at least 10 such agreements in an attempt to stave off the inevitable.

While factoring can be a viable source of emergency liquidity for struggling companies, the terms can be highly punitive. Note:

…the Debtors sold no less than $7,988,325 of future accounts receivable to the MCA Parties in exchange for cash payments in an amount not less than $5,880,000, less fees and certain expenses. These records indicate that the MCA Parties purchased the Debtors’ future accounts receivable at significant discounts, charged high fees and had the ability to debit the Debtors’ deposit accounts directly. The depletion of the Debtors’ liquidity attributable to obligations under the MCA Agreements, coupled with the seasonal downturn in the Sonic Drive-In restaurants, left the Debtors’ cash flow position untenable.

Carry the one, add the two…yeah, that’s a pretty solid discount to par value: a bit over 25%. Think about that: the debtors’ need for liquidity was so dire that they agreed to give away approximately 25 cents on every dollar that would enter their accounts because they didn’t have the luxury of time to wait for those receivables to come in. Private equity firms and others are often dubbed “vultures” but factors have a very interesting role to play here too.

And so the debtors were so low on cash that they ultimately had to get a bridge loan from their franchisor, SRI Holding Company (Sonic). The bridge loan will rollup into a DIP credit facility agreement which, with the pre-petition secured lenders’ consent, will prime the pre-petition secured debt. The DIP credit facility will finance the debtors’ cases and give the debtors some breathing room to pursue a 363 asset sale that will clear out the pre-petition debt and eliminate any and all uncertainty relating to the factoring agreements.

One final point here: it is highly unlikely that a sale will generate enough proceeds to clear both the DIP credit facility and the pre-petition secured debt. This means that general unsecured creditors will get the royal effing. Given all of the pain in restaurant and grocery chains, this begs the question: how much supply chain pain is there out there right now? Food distributors? Packagers? We reckon quite a bit.

*Here there is some question as to whether certain of the factoring agreement counterparties filed UCC-1 financing statements which may put into dispute the validity of their said security interest in those receivables. Any official committee of unsecured creditors will take great interest in whether UCC-1s have been recorded though it likely won’t matter given the value of the assets and the likely superceding security interests held by the prepetition secured lender.

  • Jurisdiction: W.D. of North Carolina (Judge Beyer)

  • Capital Structure: $450k Bridge Loan (SRI Holding Company), $22.3mm (Bridge Funding Group Inc.)

  • Professionals:

    • Legal: Moore Van Allen PLLC (Zachary Smith, Gabriel Mathless, Hillary Crabtree, Joanne Wu, James Langdon) & JD Thompson Law (Linda Simpson)

    • Independent Director: Finley Group (Matthew Smith)

    • Financial Advisor/CRO: Meru LLC (Brian Rosenthal, Alissia Bell)

    • Claims Agent: Stretto (*click on the link above for free docket access)

  • Other Parties in Interest:

    • DIP Lender: SRI Holding Company, SRI Operating Company, Sonic Franchising LLC and Sonic Industries LLC

      • Legal: DLA Piper US LLP (Daniel Simon, Davi Avraham) & Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA (David Schilli)

New Chapter 11 Filing - DBMP LLC

DBMP LLC

January 23, 2020

Let’s just deem January 2020 “Asbestos Month.” The end.

  • Jurisdiction: W.D. of North Carolina (Judge Whitley)

  • Professionals:

    • Legal: Jones Day (Gregory Gordon, Amanda Rush, Jeffrey Ellman, Danielle Barav-Johnson) & Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA (Garland Cassada, David Schilli, Andrew Tarr)

    • CRO: Robert J. Panaro

    • Claims Agent: Epiq Bankruptcy Solutions LLC (*click on the link above for free docket access)

New Chapter 11 Bankruptcy - Bestwall LLC

Bestwall LLC

  • 11/2/17 Recap: Nothing like a big juicy asbestos case. Here, the company filed for bankruptcy to establish an asbestos trust to deal with current and future asbestos claimants on a permanent and equitable basis. It has been dealing with litigation for nearly 40 years - over the course of hundreds of thousands of cases - and because it thinks it will be the target of continued litigation "through at least 2050," it thought it best to file and take advantage of the Bankruptcy Code's scheme for dealing with asbestos-related claims. 
  • Jurisdiction: W.D. of North Carolina (Judge Beyer) 
  • Company Professionals:
    • Legal: Jones Day (Gregory Gordon, Daniel Prieto, Jeffrey Ellman, Amanda Rush, Brad Erens) & (local) Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA (Garland Cassada, David Schilli, Andrew Tarr)
    • Claims Agent: Donlin Recano & Co. Inc. (*click on company name above for free docket access)
    • Other Parties in Interest:
      • Creditor: Georgia-Pacific LLC
        • Legal: Debevoise & Plimpton (Natasha Labovitz, Mark Goodman)

Updated 11/8/17

New Chapter 11 Filing - Portrait Innovations Inc.

Portrait Innovations Inc.

  • 9/1/17 Recap: Remember professional portrait studios? Yeah, we don't either. Mostly because we haven't stepped foot in a mixed-use commercial location or traditional retail park since we got linked up to the internet 20 years ago. And that is predominantly where you'd find a Portrait Innovations studio: there are 119 of them in 31 states (including 3 studios in Walmart Supercenters). You know the story by now: with a significant decline of brick-and-mortar retail visitors comes decreased revenue...blah blah blah, bankruptcy. Here, management attempted to stave off the inevitable by negotiating rent forgiveness, closing underperforming locations (63, to be exact), and pursuing the positive, i.e., more Walmart studios. In the absence of flex by the landlords, management lacked the capital, however, to accomplish these goals. The bankruptcy filing is meant to effectuate a sale of the equity to a buyer and further reconcile leases. The company has secured a stalking horse bid from prepetition creditor, CapitalSouth Partners, and a $5mm DIP credit facility to fund the cases. 
  • Jurisdiction: W.D. of North Carolina (Judge Whitley)
  • Capital Structure: $15mm senior secured debt (CapitalSouth Partners SBIC Fund III LP)     
  • Company Professionals:
    • Legal: Rayburn Cooper & Durham PA (John Miller Jr., Paul Baynard, Benjamin Shook)
    • Investment Banker: Piper Jaffray & Co.
    • Real Estate Advisor: Hilco Real Estate LLC
    • Claims Agent: Rust Consulting/Omni Bankruptcy (*click on company name above for free docket access)
  • Other Parties in Interest:
    • Secured Creditor/DIP Lender/Bidder: CapitalSouth Partners SBIC Fund III LP
      • Legal: K&L Gates LLP (Charles A. Dale III, Aaron Rothman, Margaret Westbrook)

Updated 9/18/17 5:15 pm CT