1 / 31

October 15, 2004 Houston, Texas

2004 ABA Fall Meeting International Law Section. The Avianca Chapter 11 Case Larry B. Pascal Haynes and Boone, LLP Dallas Francisco Reyes Villamizar Francisco Reyes & Asociados Abogados Bogota. October 15, 2004 Houston, Texas. Chapter 11. Outline. Introduction

annis
Télécharger la présentation

October 15, 2004 Houston, Texas

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2004 ABA Fall Meeting International Law Section The Avianca Chapter 11 Case Larry B. Pascal Haynes and Boone, LLP Dallas Francisco Reyes Villamizar Francisco Reyes & Asociados Abogados Bogota October 15, 2004 Houston, Texas

  2. Chapter 11

  3. Outline • Introduction • Differences Between US and Colombian Bankruptcy Law • Motion to Dismiss • Judge Gropper’s Opinion

  4. I. Introduction

  5. Overview • Airline bankruptcies are some of most complex cases due to variety of factors • Avianca case presents interesting cross-border insolvency questions • AV filed in SDNY, but not in home country • March 2003 filing • Review factors in court’s December 23, 2003 Memorandum Opinion • 303 B.R. 1 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.)

  6. General Background • Avianca SA is Colombian corporation • Principal shareholders (98%): • Colombian Federation of Coffee Growers • Valores Bavaria S.A. • Publicly traded on Bogota Stock Exchange (less than 2%) • Bogota hub • Served two US cities – Miami and New York • 14 destinations in Colombia • 12 other locations (primarily Central and South America)

  7. General Background (cont’d) • 31 aircraft and 16 spare engines • All leased from lessors located in US • or doing business in US • Avianca Inc. - US subsidiary that acts as general agent • Workforce consisting of • 4,153 Colombian employees • 28 in US • 148 outside of Colombia and US • Manpower contracts with third parties for additional 900 employees • Revenue • 50%+ from Colombian domestic market • 24% from Colombia – US Market

  8. Chronology • Oldest operating airline in Western Hemisphere • Late 1999 faced financial/operational difficulties • Implemented cost-cutting measures • September 2000 re-negotiated with lessors and lenders • Early 2001 entered formal restructuring talks • Exception – BoNY • 2002 – Signed “Integration Agreement with ACES, Colombia’s 2nd largest airline • “Alianza Summa” formed • Avianca, ACES, and SAM • Code share and marketing/management integration

  9. Corporate Structure Avianca S.A. Parent Company Chapter 11 Avianca Inc. Wholly owned subsidiary and Agent • Both companies file for Chapter 11 • protection in March 2003

  10. Main Factors Affecting Avianca • Slowdown of Colombian Economy • Exchange rates affecting peso • BoNY Dispute • High fuel prices • 9-11 • High aircraft lease rates post 9-11 • Lessors unwilling to re-negotiate lease rates

  11. Nationalities of Main Creditors • Caxdac Pilot Pension Fund • US$98 million secured by funds in trust • Bank of New York Noteholders • Aircraft Lessors • Colombian Tax Authorities • Airline Vendors (Colombia and rest of world) • Dip Lenders

  12. Creditors Committee • CAXDAC (pilot pension fund) • Pilots’ Union • Banco de Bogota • Pegasus (aircraft lessor) • Debis (aircraft lessor) • United Aerospace Corp. Inc. (aircraft parts)

  13. Differences Between US and Colombian Bankruptcy Law

  14. Advantages of Chapter 11 Filing • Automatic stay • Treatment of executory contracts • Assume/reject process • In Latin America, debtor typically required to accept contract or pay full damages • Sixty day aircraft lease vacation period under § 1110/ certainty of non-foreclosure during such period • Mitigation of damages

  15. Differing Priorities under US/ Colombian Law • Pension liabilities • Labor liabilities • Taxes/Government Fees • Secured Creditors

  16. Motion to Dismiss

  17. Motions to Dismiss • Various creditors filed Motions to Dismiss in April 2003 • Led by aircraft lessors Pegasus and Ansett • Various other small parties including United Aerospace also filed similar motions • Avianca moved to reject aircraft leases • Before court issued ruling, Avianca and lessors settled issue and re-negotiated leases • United Aerospace remained as movant and court decided issue

  18. Motions to Dismiss (cont’d) • Movants argued: • Inability of US court to bind Colombian creditors • Forum Shopping • Discrimination against US creditors • US creditors bound by automatic stay while foreign creditors not

  19. Motions to Dismiss (cont’d) • Not in “best interest” of debtor and creditors to file for Chapter 11 • Filing created uncertainty and done in bad faith • Law 550 process was viable • Not enough contact with U.S.

  20. IV. Judge Gropper’s Decision

  21. § 109 Analysis – Who May Be Debtor • § 109(a) of US Bankruptcy Code permits filing by person “that resides or has a domicile, place of business, or property in the United States…” • Court found that both Avianca SA and Avianca Inc. met this test

  22. § 305(a) Analysis - Abstention • Notwithstanding broad eligibility standards found in §109, court has ample authority to dismiss case not properly brought • §305(a) test is • (1) interests of creditors and debtors would be better served by such dismissal, or • (2)(A) there is a pending foreign proceeding; and • (2)(B) Section 304(c) factors warrant such dismissal

  23. § 305(a) (1) Analysis • Court emphasized that both “creditor and debtor” must be better served by dismissal • Court found that Avianca would not be better served by dismissal • No showing that Avianca could have obtained jurisdiction over aircraft lessors and other major financial creditors with Law 550 action in Colombia • Law 550 is only four years old and relatively untested in large cases • Law 550 has no provision to reject burdensome leases • Law 550 allow lessor to terminate reorganization, repossess property, and force liquidation if defaults not cured within 90 days from filing.

  24. § 305(a) (1) Analysis (cont’d) • Court also found that creditors would not be better served by dismissal • Debtor able maintain routes and continue business • Signed agreements post-petition with major suppliers, tax authorities, employee groups, and other Colombian and US entities • Approved by Court after substantial Creditor’s Committee participation • Most aircraft lessors agreed to restructure lease without litigation/Pegasus and Ansett settled later • BoNY never requested Colombian • forum to resolve its disputes

  25. § 305(a) (2) Analysis – Foreign Proceeding Pending • § 305(a)(2) also permits court to dismiss case if foreign proceeding is pending and § 304 (c) factors warrant such action. • Court rejected § 305(a)(2) Dismissal Because No Foreign Proceeding Pending

  26. § 305(a) (2) Analysis – Foreign Proceeding Pending (cont’d) • Court also cited • Ample contacts with US • Aircraft flying in US (“lease agreements are life support of an airline”) • Substantial US subsidiary • US credit card receivables program • Lessors subject to US jurisdiction • Presence of property in US and willingness of major Colombian parties in interest to participate

  27. Section 304 – Ancillary Proceeding • Movants also argued that availability of § 304 ancillary proceeding relief implied duty of foreign debtor to file in home country and avoid US plenary case • Court rejected this argument citing § 303(b)(4) permitting plenary proceeding in US • Principle is “thorough pragmatism” as to what relief best suits needs of foreign debtor

  28. Section 304 – Ancillary Proceeding • Court rejected notion that Avianca would be “better served” by Law 550 proceeding and § 340 ancillary proceeding • Encounter problem that US courts should not confer substantive rights that go beyond these available in home country • Lack of effective mechanism for rejecting leases • If Avianca filed a 550 ancillary case, both courts could be aligned in the best interest of all parties

  29. Conclusion

  30. Avianca respected process, prepared business plan, and worked closely with Creditors Committee • Few collection actions in Colombia • Important to have good understanding of local law/local counsel • Flexibility of US legal system was critical ingredient

  31. For more information, please contact Francisca Reyes Villamizar Francisco Reyes & Asociados Abogados Carrera 12, No. 96-67, Office 304 Bogota, Colombia Telephone: 011-571-691-4647 E-mail: frlaw@roble.net.co or Larry B. Pascal Haynes and Boone, LLP 901 Main Street, Suite 3100 Dallas, TX 75202 Direct Dial: 214-651-5652 Direct Fax: 214-200-0702 E-mail: larry.pascal@haynesboone.com • d-1236496.3

More Related