San Marino Bankruptcy Attorney

TITLE 11 - BANKRUPTCY
CHAPTER 11 - REORGANIZATION
    SUBCHAPTER II - THE PLAN

-HEAD-
    Sec. 1125. Postpetition disclosure and solicitation

-STATUTE-
      (a) In this section - 
        (1) "adequate information" means information of a kind, and in
      sufficient detail, as far as is reasonably practicable in light
      of the nature and history of the debtor and the condition of the
      debtor's books and records, including a discussion of the
      potential material Federal tax consequences of the plan to the
      debtor, any successor to the debtor, and a hypothetical investor
      typical of the holders of claims or interests in the case, that
      would enable such a hypothetical investor of the relevant class
      to make an informed judgment about the plan, but adequate
      information need not include such information about any other
      possible or proposed plan and in determining whether a disclosure
      statement provides adequate information, the court shall consider
      the complexity of the case, the benefit of additional information
      to creditors and other parties in interest, and the cost of
      providing additional information; and
        (2) "investor typical of holders of claims or interests of the
      relevant class" means investor having - 
          (A) a claim or interest of the relevant class;
          (B) such a relationship with the debtor as the holders of
        other claims or interests of such class generally have; and
          (C) such ability to obtain such information from sources
        other than the disclosure required by this section as holders
        of claims or interests in such class generally have.

      (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. The court may
    approve a disclosure statement without a valuation of the debtor or
    an appraisal of the debtor's assets.
      (c) The same disclosure statement shall be transmitted to each
    holder of a claim or interest of a particular class, but there may
    be transmitted different disclosure statements, differing in
    amount, detail, or kind of information, as between classes.
      (d) Whether a disclosure statement required under subsection (b)
    of this section contains adequate information is not governed by
    any otherwise applicable nonbankruptcy law, rule, or regulation,
    but an agency or official whose duty is to administer or enforce
    such a law, rule, or regulation may be heard on the issue of
    whether a disclosure statement contains adequate information. Such
    an agency or official may not appeal from, or otherwise seek review
    of, an order approving a disclosure statement.
      (e) A person that solicits acceptance or rejection of a plan, in
    good faith and in compliance with the applicable provisions of this
    title, or that participates, in good faith and in compliance with
    the applicable provisions of this title, in the offer, issuance,
    sale, or purchase of a security, offered or sold under the plan, of
    the debtor, of an affiliate participating in a joint plan with the
    debtor, or of a newly organized successor to the debtor under the
    plan, is not liable, on account of such solicitation or
    participation, for violation of any applicable law, rule, or
    regulation governing solicitation of acceptance or rejection of a
    plan or the offer, issuance, sale, or purchase of securities.
      (f) Notwithstanding subsection (b), in a small business case - 
        (1) the court may determine that the plan itself provides
      adequate information and that a separate disclosure statement is
      not necessary;
        (2) the court may approve a disclosure statement submitted on
      standard forms approved by the court or adopted under section
      2075 of title 28; and
        (3)(A) the court may conditionally approve a disclosure
      statement subject to final approval after notice and a hearing;
        (B) acceptances and rejections of a plan may be solicited based
      on a conditionally approved disclosure statement if the debtor
      provides adequate information to each holder of a claim or
      interest that is solicited, but a conditionally approved
      disclosure statement shall be mailed not later than 25 days
      before the date of the hearing on confirmation of the plan; and
        (C) the hearing on the disclosure statement may be combined
      with the hearing on confirmation of a plan.

      (g) Notwithstanding subsection (b), an acceptance or rejection of
    the plan may be solicited from a holder of a claim or interest if
    such solicitation complies with applicable nonbankruptcy law and if
    such holder was solicited before the commencement of the case in a
    manner complying with applicable nonbankruptcy law.

-SOURCE-
    (Pub. L. 95-598, Nov. 6, 1978, 92 Stat. 2633; Pub. L. 98-353, title
    III, Sec. 509, July 10, 1984, 98 Stat. 385; Pub. L. 103-394, title
    II, Sec. 217(e), Oct. 22, 1994, 108 Stat. 4127; Pub. L. 109-8,
    title IV, Secs. 408, 431, title VII, Sec. 717, Apr. 20, 2005, 119
    Stat. 106, 109, 131.)


                       HISTORICAL AND REVISION NOTES                   

                          LEGISLATIVE STATEMENTS                      
      Section 1125 of the House amendment is derived from section 1125
    of the House bill and Senate amendment except with respect to
    section 1125(f) of the Senate amendment. It will not be necessary
    for the court to consider the report of the examiner prior to
    approval of a disclosure statement. The investigation of the
    examiner is to proceed on an independent basis from the procedure
    of the reorganization under chapter 11. In order to ensure that the
    examiner's report will be expeditious and fair, the examiner is
    precluded from serving as a trustee in the case or from
    representing a trustee if a trustee is appointed, whether the case
    remains in chapter 11 or is converted to chapter 7 or 13.

                         SENATE REPORT NO. 95-989                     
      This section extends disclosure requirements in connection with
    solicitations to all cases under chapter 11. Heretofore this
    subject was dealt with by the Bankruptcy Act [former title 11]
    mainly in the special contexts of railroad reorganizations and
    chapter X [chapter 10 of former title 11] cases.
      Subsection (a) defines (1) the subject matter of disclosure as
    "adequate information" and relates the standard of adequacy to an
    (2) "investor typical of holders or claims or interests of the
    relevant class." "Investor" is used broadly here, for it will
    almost always include a trade creditor or other creditors who
    originally had no investment intent or interest. It refers to the
    investment-type decision by those called upon to accept a plan to
    modify their claims or interests, which typically will involve
    acceptance of new securities or of a cash payment in lieu thereof.
      Both the kind and form of information are left essentially to the
    judicial discretion of the court, guided by the specification in
    subparagraph (a)(1) that it be of a kind and in sufficient detail
    that a reasonable and typical investor can make an informed
    judgment about the plan. The information required will necessarily
    be governed by the circumstances of the case.
      Reporting and audit standards devised for solvent and continuing
    businesses do not necessarily fit a debtor in reorganization.
    Subsection (a)(1) expressly incorporates consideration of the
    nature and history of the debtor and the condition of its books and
    records into the determination of what is reasonably practicable to
    supply. These factors are particularly pertinent to historical data
    and to discontinued operations of no future relevance.
      A plan is necessarily predicated on knowledge of the assets and
    liabilities being dealt with and on factually supported
    expectations as to the future course of the business sufficient to
    meet the feasibility standard in section 1130(a)(11) of this title.
    It may thus be necessary to provide estimates or judgments for that
    purpose. Yet it remains practicable to describe, in such detail as
    may be relevant and needed, the basis for the plan and the data on
    which supporters of the plan rely.
      Subsection (b) establishes the jurisdiction of the court over
    this subject by prohibiting solicitation of acceptance or rejection
    of a plan after the commencement of the case, unless the person
    solicited receives, before or at the time of the solicitation, a
    written disclosure statement approved by the court, after notice
    and hearing, as containing adequate information. As under present
    law, determinations of value, by appraisal or otherwise, are not
    required if not needed to accomplish the purpose specified in
    subsection (a)(1).
      Subsection (c) requires that the same disclosure statement be
    transmitted to each member of a class. It recognizes that the
    information needed for an informed judgment about the plan may
    differ among classes. A class whose rights under the plan center on
    a particular fund or asset would have no use for an extensive
    description of other matters that could not affect them.
      Subsection (d) relieves the court of the need to follow any
    otherwise applicable Federal or state law in determining the
    adequacy of the information contained in the disclosure statement
    submitted for its approval. It authorizes an agency or official,
    Federal or state, charged with administering cognate laws so
    preempted to advise the court on the adequacy of proposed
    disclosure statement. But they are not authorized to appeal the
    court's decision.
      Solicitations with respect to a plan do not involve just mere
    requests for opinions. Acceptance of the plan vitally affects
    creditors and shareholders, and most frequently the solicitation
    involves an offering of securities in exchange for claims or
    interests. The present bankruptcy statute [former title 11] has
    exempted such offerings under each of its chapters from the
    registration and disclosure requirements of the Securities Act of
    1933 [15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.], an exemption also continued by
    section 1145(a)(2) of this title. The extension of the disclosure
    requirements to all chapter 11 cases justifies the coordinate
    extension of these exemptions. By the same token, no valid purpose
    is served not to exempt from the requirements of similar state laws
    in a matter under the exclusive jurisdiction of the Federal
    bankruptcy laws.
      Subsection (e) exonerates any person who, in good faith and in
    compliance with this title, solicits or participates in the offer,
    issuance, sale or purchase, under the plan, of a security from any
    liability, on account of such solicitation or participation, for
    violation of any law, rule, or regulation governing the offer,
    issuance, sale, or purchase of securities. This exoneration is
    coordinate with the exemption from Federal or State registration or
    licensing requirements provided by section 1145 of this title.
      In the nonpublic case, the court, when approving the disclosure
    statement, has before it the texts of the plan, a proposed
    disclosure document, and such other information the plan proponents
    and other interested parties may present at the hearing. In the
    final analysis the exoneration which subsection (e) grants must
    depend on the good faith of the plan proponents and of those who
    participate in the preparation of the disclosure statement and in
    the solicitation. Subsection (e) does not affect civil or criminal
    liability for defects and inadequacies that are beyond the limits
    of the exoneration that good faith provides.
      Section 1125 applies to public companies as well, subject to the
    qualifications of subsection (f). In case of a public company no
    solicitations of acceptance is permitted unless authorized by the
    court upon or after approval of the plan pursuant to section
    1128(c). In addition to the documents specified in subsection (b),
    subsection (f) requires transmission of the opinion and order of
    the court approving the plan and, if filed, the advisory report of
    the Securities and Exchange Commission or a summary thereof
    prepared by the Commission.

                          HOUSE REPORT NO. 95-595                      
      This section is new. It is the heart of the consolidation of the
    various reorganization chapters found in current law. It requires
    disclosure before solicitation of acceptances of a plan or
    reorganization.
      Subsection (a) contains two definitions. First, "adequate
    information" is defined to mean information of a kind, and
    insufficient detail, as far as is reasonably practical in light of
    the nature and history of the debtor and the condition of the
    debtor's books and records, that would enable a hypothetical
    reasonable investor typical of holders of claims or interests of
    the relevant class to make an informed judgment about the plan.
    Second, "investor typical of holders of claims or interests of the
    relevant class" is defined to mean an investor having a claim or
    interest of the relevant class, having such a relationship with the
    debtor as the holders of other claims or interests of the relevant
    class have, and having such ability to obtain information from
    sources other than the disclosure statement as holders of claims or
    interests of the relevant class have, and having such ability to
    obtain information from sources other than the disclosure statement
    as holders of claims or interests of the relevant class have. That
    is, the hypothetical investor against which the disclosure is
    measured must not be an insider if other members of the class are
    not insiders, and so on. In other words, the adequacy of disclosure
    is measured against the typical investor, not an extraordinary one.
      The Supreme Court's rulemaking power will not extend to
    rulemaking that will prescribe what constitutes adequate
    information. That standard is a substantive standard. Precisely
    what constitutes adequate information in any particular instance
    will develop on a case-by-case basis. Courts will take a practical
    approach as to what is necessary under the circumstances of each
    case, such as the cost of preparation of the statements, the need
    for relative speed in solicitation and confirmation, and, of
    course, the need for investor protection. There will be a balancing
    of interests in each case. In reorganization cases, there is
    frequently great uncertainty. Therefore the need for flexibility is
    greatest.
      Subsection (b) is the operative subsection. It prohibits
    solicitation of acceptances or rejections of a plan after the
    commencement of the case unless, at the time of the solicitation or
    before, there is transmitted to the solicitee the plan or a summary
    of the plan, and a written disclosure statement approved by the
    court as containing adequate information. The subsection permits
    approval of the statement without the necessity of a valuation of
    the debtor or an appraisal of the debtor's assets. However, in some
    cases, a valuation or appraisal will be necessary to develop
    adequate information. The court will be able to determine what is
    necessary in light of the facts and circumstances of each
    particular case.
      Subsection (c) requires that the same disclosure statement go to
    all members of a particular class, but permits different disclosure
    to different classes.
      Subsection (d) excepts the disclosure statements from the
    requirements of the securities laws (such as section 14 of the 1934
    Act [15 U.S.C. 78n] and section 5 of the 1933 Act [15 U.S.C. 77e]),
    and from similar State securities laws (blue sky laws, for
    example). The subsection permits an agency or official whose duty
    is to administer or enforce such laws (such as the Securities and
    Exchange Commission or State Corporation Commissioners) to appear
    and be heard on the issue of whether a disclosure statement
    contains adequate information, but the agencies and officials are
    not granted the right of appeal from an adverse determination in
    any capacity. They may join in an appeal by a true party in
    interest, however.
      Subsection (e) is a safe harbor provision, and is necessary to
    make the exemption provided by subsection (d) effective. Without
    it, a creditor that solicited an acceptance or rejection in
    reliance on the court's approval of a disclosure statement would be
    potentially liable under antifraud sections designed to enforce the
    very sections of the securities laws from which subsection (d)
    excuses compliance. The subsection protects only persons that
    solicit in good faith and in compliance with the applicable
    provisions of the reorganization chapter. It provides protection
    from legal liability as well as from equitable liability based on
    an injunctive action by the SEC or other agency or official.

                                AMENDMENTS                            
      2005 - Subsec. (a)(1). Pub. L. 109-8, Sec. 717, inserted
    "including a discussion of the potential material Federal tax
    consequences of the plan to the debtor, any successor to the
    debtor, and a hypothetical investor typical of the holders of
    claims or interests in the case," after "records," and substituted
    "such a hypothetical investor" for "a hypothetical reasonable
    investor typical of holders of claims or interests".
      Pub. L. 109-8, Sec. 431(1), inserted before semicolon "and in
    determining whether a disclosure statement provides adequate
    information, the court shall consider the complexity of the case,
    the benefit of additional information to creditors and other
    parties in interest, and the cost of providing additional
    information".
      Subsec. (f). Pub. L. 109-8, Sec. 431(2), added subsec. (f) and
    struck out former subsec. (f) which read as follows:
    "Notwithstanding subsection (b), in a case in which the debtor has
    elected under section 1121(e) to be considered a small business - 
        "(1) the court may conditionally approve a disclosure statement
      subject to final approval after notice and a hearing;
        "(2) acceptances and rejections of a plan may be solicited
      based on a conditionally approved disclosure statement as long as
      the debtor provides adequate information to each holder of a
      claim or interest that is solicited, but a conditionally approved
      disclosure statement shall be mailed at least 10 days prior to
      the date of the hearing on confirmation of the plan; and
        "(3) a hearing on the disclosure statement may be combined with
      a hearing on confirmation of a plan."
      Subsec. (g). Pub. L. 109-8, Sec. 408, added subsec. (g).
      1994 - Subsec. (f). Pub. L. 103-394 added subsec. (f).
      1984 - Subsec. (a)(1). Pub. L. 98-353, Sec. 509(a)(1), inserted
    ", but adequate information need not include such information about
    any other possible or proposed plan".
      Subsec. (a)(2)(B). Pub. L. 98-353, Sec. 509(a)(2), inserted "the"
    after "with".
      Subsec. (a)(2)(C). Pub. L. 98-353, Sec. 509(a)(3), inserted "of"
    after "holders".
      Subsec. (d). Pub. L. 98-353, Sec. 509(b), inserted "required
    under subsection (b) of this section" and ", or otherwise seek
    review of,".
      Subsec. (e). Pub. L. 98-353, Sec. 509(c), inserted "acceptance or
    rejection of a plan" after "solicits", and "solicitation of
    acceptance or rejection of a plan or" after "governing".

                     EFFECTIVE DATE OF 2005 AMENDMENT                 
      Amendment by Pub. L. 109-8 effective 180 days after Apr. 20,
    2005, and not applicable with respect to cases commenced under this
    title before such effective date, except as otherwise provided, see
    section 1501 of Pub. L. 109-8, set out as a note under section 101
    of this title.

                     EFFECTIVE DATE OF 1994 AMENDMENT                 
      Amendment by Pub. L. 103-394 effective Oct. 22, 1994, and not
    applicable with respect to cases commenced under this title before
    Oct. 22, 1994, see section 702 of Pub. L. 103-394, set out as a
    note under section 101 of this title.

                     EFFECTIVE DATE OF 1984 AMENDMENT                 
      Amendment by Pub. L. 98-353 effective with respect to cases filed
    90 days after July 10, 1984, see section 552(a) of Pub. L. 98-353,
    set out as a note under section 101 of this title.

-End-