Five Things You Need to Know About Your Customer in Bankruptcy
Date: November 17, 2020
- Don’t Keep the News to Yourself.
- The Customer is Now Protected by the Automatic Stay.
First, because of the bankruptcy filing, the Customer and its property are protected by the “automatic stay,” which prohibits you from taking certain collection actions against the Customer. The stay makes it illegal for you to file a lawsuit to collect a pre-bankruptcy debt. In addition, you cannot continue pursuing an existing lawsuit and you must take steps to stop any ongoing collection action. In most cases, the stay also prevents you from terminating your contract with the customer (e.g., supply contract, services contract). Finally, you cannot take any action to obtain possession or control of the Customer’s property (e.g., repossession of consigned inventory). It is imperative that you not violate the stay because doing so can result in severe monetary penalties, including an award of punitive damages in the most egregious cases.
- Executory Contracts.
If a contract is executory, you must honor it and perform your obligations thereunder until the Customer decides to assume or reject the contract. Pending assumption or rejection, you may have certain rights to set-off, recoup, and/or suspend service, although you should consult counsel before exercising any remedy against the bankrupt Customer.
In order for your Customer to assume its contract with you, it must cure all defaults (including paying any undisputed amounts you are owed) and provide “adequate assurance” that it can perform (i.e., pay) under the contract in the future. The Bankruptcy Code also permits your Customer to assign your contract to a third-party in certain situations (e.g., sale of the Customer’s assets). Again, in order to accomplish this goal, the Customer, or the assignee, must cure defaults and must produce evidence that the assignee can perform all obligations under your agreement on a going-forward basis. In certain limited situations, you may have a defense against assumption and assignment, depending on the circumstances of the case (e.g., state law prohibits assignment without your affirmative consent). Importantly though, the Bankruptcy Code generally makes any contractual “anti-assignment” provision unenforceable.
Notably, if you terminated the contract with your Customer before the bankruptcy filing, that contract does not become property of the bankruptcy estate and the Customer has no right to assume or assign it. For termination to be effective, you must have taken all necessary steps, and the Customer cannot have any remaining right of redemption, cure, or reversal either under the terms of the contract or under applicable law. The language in the contract generally governs whether the default is curable. Depending on the nature of the default, it is even possible for a court to permit the Customer to remedy the default even after the cure rights have expired.
- Risks of Doing Business with a Customer in Bankruptcy.
Also, you must continue to supply product to the Customer under existing executory contracts and you cannot unilaterally change the payment terms of the agreement (e.g., you cannot impose “pre-pay” when contract requires “net-30”). However, because your Customer has to provide you with some assurance that it can perform under the agreement while in Chapter 11 bankruptcy, including the ability to pay for purchased product, you may be able to negotiate shorter payment terms to reduce your risk. This type of negotiation can be delicate so you must take extra care not to threaten to terminate the contract without first obtaining permission from the Bankruptcy Court.
- Getting Paid for Pre-Bankruptcy Receivables.
If you are a supplier of goods, the Bankruptcy Code provides you increased protection by granting you an administrative expense claim for the goods you sold to the Customer that they received during the twenty days before they filed for bankruptcy. Having such a claim is important in two ways. First, an administrative claim is accorded higher priority in the payment scheme under the Bankruptcy Code, which means that you are much more likely to get paid for these amounts. Second, in order to obtain court approval of a Chapter 11 plan of reorganization, the Customer must prove that it can pay these administrative expense claims when it emerges from bankruptcy (i.e., when the plan becomes “effective”). This requirement gives you significant leverage in any Chapter 11 case involving a Customer.
In light of the economic downturn, taking these steps will help you be better prepared if one of your Customers files for bankruptcy.
The information contained here is not intended to provide legal advice or opinion and should not be acted upon without consulting an attorney. Counsel should not be selected based on advertising materials, and we recommend that you conduct further investigation when seeking legal representation.