AI Case Brief
Generate an AI-powered case brief with:
Estimated cost: $0.001 - $0.003 per brief
Full Opinion
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge NIEMEYER wrote the opinion, in which Judge FLOYD joined. Judge WYNN wrote a separate opinion concurring in Parts I, II, and III and the judgment.
This appeal presents the significant question under Chapter 15 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code of how to mediate between the United Statesâ interests in recognizing and cooperating with a foreign insolvency proceeding and its interests in protecting creditors of the foreign debtor with respect to U.S. assets, as provided in 11 U.S.C. §§ 1521 and 1522.
Qimonda AG, a German corporation that manufactured semiconductor devices and was, for a brief time, one of the worldâs largest manufacturers of dynamic random access memory (âDRAMâ), filed for insolvency in Munich, Germany, in January 2009. â The principal assets of Qimondaâs estate consisted of some 10,000 patents, about 4,000 of which were U.S. patents. These patents were subject to cross-license agreements with Qimondaâs competitors, as was common in the semiconductor industry to avoid infringement risks caused by the âpatent thicketâ resulting from the overlapping patent rights of some 420,000 patents in the semiconductor industry.
Ancillary to the German insolvency proceeding, Dr. Michael JaffĂ©, the insolvency administrator appointed by the Munich court, filed an application in the Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Virginia under Chapter 15 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, petitioning the U.S. court to recognize the German insolvency proceeding as a âforeign main proceedingâ in order to obtain an array of privileges available under Chapter 15. Among other relief, JaffĂ© specifically requested that the bankruptcy court entrust to him, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1521(a)(5), the administration of all of Qimondaâs assets' within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States, which largely consisted of the 4,000 U.S. patents.
Contemporaneously with the Chapter 15 proceeding, JaffĂ© sent letters to licensees of Qimondaâs patents under its cross-license agreements, declaring that, under § 103 of the German Insolvency Code, the licenses granted under Qimonda patents âare no longer enforceable,â including the licenses under the companyâs 4,000 U.S. patents. As JaffĂ© later indicated to the bankruptcy court, he intended to re-license Qimondaâs patents for the benefit of Qim-ondaâs creditors, replacing licenses paid for in-kind with cross-licenses with licenses paid for with cash through royalties.
The bankruptcy court entered an order recognizing the German insolvency pro
In this direct appeal from the bankruptcy court, Jaffé challenges both of these conclusions, arguing that the court erred in its construction of Chapter 15 and abused its discretion in applying it.
We conclude that the bankruptcy court properly recognized that JaffĂ©âs request for discretionary relief under § 1521(a) required it to consider âthe interests of the creditors and other interested entities, including the debtorâ under § 1522(a) and that it properly construed § 1522(a) as requiring the application of a balancing test. Moreover, relying on the particular facts of this case and the extensive record developed during the four-day evidentiary hearing, we also conclude that the bankruptcy court reasonably exercised its discretion in balancing the interests of the licensees against the interests of the debt- or and finding that application of § 365(n) was necessary to ensure the licensees under Qimondaâs U.S. patents were sufficiently protected. Accordingly, we affirm.
I
The German insolvency proceeding
Qimonda AG filed an application to' open a preliminary insolvency proceeding in the Munich Insolvency Court on January 23, 2009, which was converted to a final proceeding on April 1, 2009. Upon converting the proceeding to a final one, the court appointed Dr. Michael JaffĂ© to serve as the estateâs insolvency administrator, a position akin to a bankruptcy trustee under U.S. law. Subsequently, Qimonda ceased all manufacturing operations and began to liquidate its estate. The principal assets of the estate consisted of its approximately 10,000 patents, including about 4,000 U.S. patents. Most of these patents covered products or processes related to DRAM, but some covered other types of semiconductor technology.
The âpatent thicketâ and the practice of cross-licensing
At the time Qimonda opened its insolvency proceeding, its patents were subject to numerous cross-license agreements with other semiconductor manufacturers, including Infineon Technologies AG (from which Qimonda had spun off in 2006), Samsung Electronics Company, International Business Machines Corporation (âIBMâ), Intel Corporation, Hynix Semiconductor, Inc., Nanya Technology Corporation, and Micron Technology, Inc. While some of these cross-license agreements were designed to facilitate specific joint ventures,
The problem of the patent thicket is exacerbated by the enormous costs incurred to bring a new semiconductor product to market. According to one expert, the price of building a new semiconductor fabrication facility can now exceed $5 billion. These sunk costs could create a classic âholdupâ problem if a new product were ultimately found to infringe someone elseâs patent, with the patentâs owner being able to extract a substantially higher royalty after the investment had been made than if a license had been negotiated beforehand. Thus, to avoid this holdup premium and enhance their design freedom, competitors in the semiconductor industry have routinely entered into broad, non-exclusive cross-license agreements with each other, âsometimes with the addition of equalizing payments (either upfront payments or so-called running royalties) to account for differences in the size and breadth of the respective patent portfolios.â In re Qimonda AG, 462 B.R. at 175.
Consistent with this industry practice, Qimonda had patent cross-license agreements with nearly every-other major semiconductor manufacturer at the time it opened its insolvency proceeding.
The Chapter 15 proceeding
JaffĂ© commenced 'this Chapter 15 proceeding on June 15, 2009, for recognition of the German insolvency proceeding as a âforeign main proceedingâ under 11 U.S.C. § 1517. JaffĂ©âs petition identified Qimondaâs known assets in the United States as including its âactive patents and patent applications filed with the United States Patent and Trademark Office,â and it sought relief designed to âgive effect to the German Proceedings in the U.S., protect the U.S. Assets, and to prevent creditors in the U.S. from taking actions that [might] frustrate the German Proceedings.â JaffĂ© also sought an order entrusting to him, under § 1521(a)(5), â[t]he administration or realization of all or part of the assets of [Qimonda] within the territorial jurisdiction of the United Statesâ and further declaring that the âGerman Proceedings ... be granted comity and [be] given full force and effectâ in the United States.
The bankruptcy court granted the relief JaffĂ© requested, entering an order granting recognition of the -German insolvency proceeding as a âforeign main proceedingâ under § 1517. At the same time, it also entered a separate Supplemental Order âgranting] further relief under 11 U.S.C. § 1521.â The Supplemental' Order made JaffĂ© âthe sole and exclusive representative of Qimonda AG in the United Statesâ and, as requested, specifically gave him the power to âadminister the assets of Qimonda AG within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States.â It authorized JaffĂ© âto examine witnesses, take evidence, seek production of documents, and deliver
Shortly after the bankruptcy court entered its Supplemental Order, JaffĂ© began sending letters to companies that had cross-license agreements with Qimonda, invoking § 103 of the German Insolvency Code and declaring that the licenses under Qimondaâs patents were âno longer enforceable.â Section 103 of the German Insolvency Code, much like § 365 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, permits an insolvency administrator to decide whether to continue to perform the debtorâs executory contracts. But, unlike § 365, which includes the § 365(n) exception, § 103 does not specifically address intellectual property licenses. In JaffĂ©âs view, however, the licenses under Qimondaâs patents fell within the scope of § 103, and it was his duty, as insolvency administrator, not to recognize them since they provided no useful compensation to Qimondaâs estate.
After receiving these letters, Samsung and Elpida Memory, Inc., responded with letters, taking the position that 11 U.S.C. § 365(n) protected their licenses under Qimondaâs U.S. patents and announcing that they were â electing to retain their rights under the licenses.
The letters from Samsung and Elpida prompted JaffĂ© to move to amend the bankruptcy courtâs July 22, 2009 Supplemental Order-to delete entirely its reference to § 365. Alternatively, JaffĂ© asked thĂ© court to add a proviso to the Supplemental Order specifying that âSection 365(n) applies only if the Foreign Representative rejects an executory contract pursuant to Section 365 (rather than simply Ă©xereising the rights granted to the Foreign Representative pursuant to the German Insolvency Code).â Several companies that had licenses under Qimondaâs U.S. patents through cross-license agreements â namely, Infineon, Samsung, Micron, Nanya, IBM, Intel, and Hynix (hereafter, the âLicenseesâ) â opposed JaffĂ©âs motion to amend the Supplemental Order.
By an opinion dated November 19, 2009, the bankruptcy court granted JĂĄffĂ©âs motion, stating that its inclusion of § 365 was âimprovident.â The court explained that consistent with Chapter 15âs goal of âproviding a systematic and consistent resolution to cross-border insolvencies,â the fate of the patent cross-license agreements should be decided in the German insolvency proceeding by applying German law. The court accordingly amended its Supplemental Order to include the alternative proviso that JaffĂ© had requested as an amendment.
The appeal to the district court and its remand order
The Licensees appealed the bankruptcy courtâs amended order to the district court, which thereafter remanded the case back to the bankruptcy court to consider 11 U.S.C. § 1522(a)âs requirement that the
As a separate basis for remand, the district court also found that the bankruptcy court had failed to consider âwhether § 365(n) embodies the fundamental public policy of the United States, such that subordinating § 365(n) to German Insolvency Code § 103 is an action âmanifestly contrary to the public policy of the United States,ââ under 11 U.S.C. § 1506. 433 B.R. at 565. The district court concluded that there were two primary circumstances in which a bankruptcy court should invoke § 1506: first, when âthe foreign proceeding was procedurally unfair;â and second, when âthe application of foreign law or the recognition of a foreign main proceeding under Chapter 15 would severely impinge the value and import of a U.S. statutory or constitutional right, such that granting comity would severely hinder United States bankruptcy courtsâ abilities to carry out ... the most fundamental policies and purposes of these rights.â Id. at 568-69 (internal quotation marks omitted). Finding the application of that standard âunclear on [the] record,â the court also directed the bankruptcy court on remand to consider âwhether conditioning the applicability of § 365(n) was a prohibited action âmanifestly contrary to the public policy of the United Statesâ under § 1506.â Id. at 570-71.
On remand to the bankruptcy court
On remand, JaffĂ© filed papers in the bankruptcy court in which he committed to re-license Qimondaâs patent portfolio to the Licensees at a reasonable and nondiscriminatory (âRANDâ) royalty. He stated that he was prepared to âenter into good faith negotiationsâ with the Licensees to set the royalty rates and, if necessary, to submit the rate amounts to arbitration before the World Intellectual Property Organization (âWIPOâ).
JaffĂ© also presented the expert testimony of Dr. William Kerr, an economist, who concluded that based on his review of existing licenses and licensing practices in the semiconductor industry, Qimondaâs estate would receive approximately $47 million per year if JaffĂ© were allowed to re-license Qimondaâs U.S. patents covering DRAM products at RAND terms. Observing that $47 million would represent a small fraction of what the Licensees spend on research and development every year, Kerr gave his opinion that âdiscontinuance of the cross-licenses at issue [and subsequent re-licensing at a RAND rate] would not unduly impair the function of the semiconductor industry or the [Licensees].â
By contrast, the Licenseesâ witnesses testified to the harm that would befall the Licensees, as well as the semiconductor industry as a whole, if the reference to § 365(n) were removed from the Supplemental Order. For example, Dr. Jerry Hausman, the Licenseesâ economist, gave his opinion that â[b]y destabilizing the system of licensing that has enabled the extraordinary success of the semiconductor industry - and other industries, failure to apply Section 365(n) would reduce investment, innovation, and competition, which would harm U.S. productivity growth and U.S. consumers as well as worldwide productivity and consumers.â Hausman also disputed Kerrâs calculation of the likely RAND royalty rates, forecasting significantly higher sums and arguing that the holdup threat could not be eliminated. Moreover, in Hausmanâs view, JaffĂ©âs offer to re-license the U.S. patents at RAND terms could not âprovide adequate protection for the interests of the [Licensees],â in part because of the danger that JaffĂ© would subsequently sell the patent portfolio to an entity that might itself file for bankruptcy, thus âextinguishing] the [Licenseesâ] licenses once again.â
The bankruptcy courtâs decision on remand
At the conclusion of the hearing, the bankruptcy court issued a memorandum opinion denying JaffĂ©âs motion to amend the Supplemental Order and confirming âthat § 365(n) applies with respect to Qim-ondaâs U.S. patents.â In re Qimonda AG, 462 B.R. at 185. The court assumed for the purpose of its analysis that JaffĂ©âs interpretation of German law was correct and that § 103 of the German Insolvency Code would authorize him to terminate the Licenseesâ right to practice Qimondaâs patents. With that assumption, the court concluded that âthe balancing of debtor and creditor interests required by § 1522(a) ... weighs in favor of making § 365(n) applicable to Dr. JaffĂ©âs administration of Qimondaâs U.S. patents.â Id. at 182.
Explaining its balancing analysis, the bankruptcy court recognized that its ruling would âresult in less value, being realized by the Qimonda estateâ but noted that Qimondaâs patents would âby no means be rendered worthless.â 462 B.R. at 182. On the other hand, the court found that a contrary ruling would create a âvery realâ ârisk to the very substantial investment the [Licensees] ... [had] collectively made in research and manufacturing facilities in the United States in reliance on the design
As an independent ground for its decision, the bankruptcy court also concluded, under 11 U.S.C. § 1506, that âdeferring to German law, to the extent it allows cancellation of the U.S. patent licenses, would be manifestly contrary to U.S. public policy.â 462 B.R. at 185. Referencing the legislative history of Congressâs enactment of the Intellectual Property Licenses in Bankruptcy Act, Pub.L. No. 100-506, 102 Stat. 2538 (1988), the court noted that § 365(n) resulted from Congressâs determination âthat allowing patent licenses to be terminated in bankruptcy would âimpose[] a burden on American technological development.â â In re Qimonda AG, 462 B.R. at 184 (quoting S.Rep. No. 100-505, at 1 (1988), reprinted in 1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3200, 3200). Informed by this congressional policy choice, the court reasoned that â[ajlthough innovation would obviously not come to a grinding halt if licenses to U.S. patents could be cancelled in a foreign insolvency proceeding, the court is persuaded by Professor Hausmanâs testimony that the resulting uncertainty would nevertheless slow the pace of innovation, to the detriment of the U.S. economy.â Id. at 185. On this basis, the court concluded that âfailure to apply § 365(n) under the circumstances of this case and this industry would âseverely impingeâ an important statutory protection accorded licensees of U.S. patents and thereby undermine a fundamental U.S. public policy promoting technological innovation.â Id.
The bankruptcy court thus held that âpublic policy, as well as the economic harm that would otherwise result to the [Licensees, require[d] that the protections of § 365(n) apply to Qimondaâs U.S. patents.â 462 B.R. at 167-68.
The direct appeal to the court of appeals
JaffĂ© appealed the bankruptcy courtâs ruling and sought from the district court a certification under 28 U.S.C. § 158(d)(2) for a direct appeal to this court. The district court concluded that the bankruptcy courtâs order qualified for certification, and, by order dated June 28, 2012, we authorized the direct appeal. See 28 U.S.C. § 158(d)(2).
II
Congress enacted Chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code in 2005 as part of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005, Pub.L. No. 109-8, 119 Stat. 23, stating that its purpose was âto incorporate the Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency,â which had been developed in 1997 by the United Nations Commission' on International Trade Law (âUNCITRALâ), âso as to provide effective mechanisms for dealing with cases of cross-border insolvency.â 11 U.S.C. § 1501(a); see also H.R.Rep. No. 109-31, pt. 1, at 105 (2005), reprinted in 2005 -U.S.C.C.A.N. 88, 169. In this respect, Chapter 15 replaced former 11 U.S.C. § 304, which authorized bankruptcy courts to award appropriate relief in a case ancillary to a foreign proceeding but which was largely discretionary. See 11 U.S.C. § 304(c) (2000). Chapter 15 lists five specific objectives: (1) to encourage cooperation with âthe courts and other competent authorities of foreign countries involved in cross-border cases;â (2) to increase âlegal certainty for trade and investment;â (3) to promote the âfair and efficient administration of cross-border insolvenciesâ so as to
To further these stated objectives, Chapter 15 authorizes the representative of a foreign insolvency proceeding to commence a case in a U.S. bankruptcy court by filing a petition for recognition of the foreign proceeding. 11 U.S.C. §§ 1504, 1509(a), 1515. If the petition meets the requirements listed in § 1517, the court must enter an order granting recognition of the foreign proceeding. And if that foreign proceeding âis pending in the country where the debtor has the center of its main interests,â it is recognized as a âforeign main proceeding.â 11 U.S.C. § 1517(b)(1); see also id. § 1502(4). With the entry of an order recognizing a foreign main proceeding, the foreign representative of the proceeding automatically receives relief as stated in § 1520, including the automatic stay created by § 362 with respect to the debtor and its property within the United States and the ability to operate the debtorâs business within the United States under § 363, as well as the right to sue and be sued and the right to âintervene in any proceedings in a State or Federal court in the United States in which the debtor is a party.â Id. §§ 1520(a), 1509(b)(1), 1524. Moreover, the statute provides that following entry of a recognition order, âa court in the United States shall grant comity or cooperation to the foreign representative,â thereby implementing a principal purpose of Chapter 15. Id. § 1509(b)(3).
Even before entry of the order granting recognition, § 1519 authorizes the bankruptcy court, on the foreign representativeâs request, to grant preliminary relief when âurgently needed to protect the assets of the debtor or the interests of the creditors.â 11 U.S.C. § 1519.
In addition to the automatic relief that comes with the entry of an order granting recognition of a foreign main proceeding, § 1521 authorizes the bankruptcy court to grant discretionary relief. Specifically, § 1521 provides that âwhere necessary to effectuate the purpose of this chapter and to protect the assets of the debtor or the interests of the creditors, the court may, at the request of the foreign representative, grant any appropriate relief.â 11 U.S.C. § 1521(a). This discretionary relief may include âentrusting the administration or realization of all or part of the debtorâs assets within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States to the foreign representative,â id. § 1521(a)(5), as well as âentrusting] the distribution of all or part of the debtorâs assets located in the United States to the foreign representative,â id. § 1521(b). The bankruptcy court, however, may only grant discretionary relief under § 1521 if it determines that âthe interests of the creditors and other interested entities, including the debtor, are sufficiently protected.â Id. § 1522(a). It may also subject the discretionary relief it grants under § 1521 âto conditions it considers appropriate, including the giving of security or the filing of a bond.â Id. § 1522(b).
Finally, all of the actions authorized in Chapter 15 are subject to § 1506, which provides that â[n]othing in this chapter prevents the court from refusing to take an action governed by this chapter if the action would be manifestly contrary to the public policy of the United States.â 11 U.S.C. § 1506.
Chapter 15 thus authorizes an âancillaryâ proceeding in a United States bankruptcy court that is largely designed to complement and assist a foreign insolvency
Thus, taken as a whole, Chapter 15â like the Model Law on which it was based â takes âseveral modest but significantâ steps toward implementing âa modern, harmonized and fair framework to address more effectively instances of cross-border insolvency.â UNCITRAL, Guide to Enactment of the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency, in Legislative Guide on Insolvency Law 307, 307 (2005) (hereinafter, âGuide to Enactmentâ).
III
JaffĂ© contends that the bankruptcy court erred by employing § 1522(a)âs sufficient protection requirement to subject his âright to administer [Qimondaâs] U.S. patents to the ... constraints imposed by § 365(n),â thus allowing the Licensees to elect to retain their license rights under Qimondaâs U.S. patents, contrary to German law as he understands it. In re Qimonda AG, 462 B.R. at 183. The bankruptcy court limited the authority it conferred on JaffĂ© under § 1521(a)(5) by balancing the interests of the Licensees with the interests of Qimondaâs estate under § 1522(a) and concluding that the Licensees should receive the protection of § 365(n). Id. at 180-83. In support of his challenge, JaffĂ© makes essentially three arguments: (1) that the district court and the bankruptcy court erred in even considering § 1522(a), because that section applies only to relief granted under § 1521, that the relief granted under § 1521 may be requested'only by the foreign representative, and that he, as the foreign representative, never requested the inclusion of § 365(n) as part of the § 1521 relief; (2) that the bankruptcy court misunderstood the type of protection afforded by § 1522(a) by applying a test that balanced the debtorâs interests and the creditorsâ interests instead of a test that placed all creditors on an equal footing; and (3) that in balancing the competing interests, the bankruptcy court overstated the risks to the Licensees, especially in view of JaffĂ©âs offer to re-license Qimondaâs patents to them, and failed to treat all creditorsâ interests equally. We address these points in order.
First, JaffĂ© argues that both the bankruptcy court and the district court erred in even considering § 1522âs sufficient protection requirement because § 1522(a) applies to relief that may be granted under § 1521, and § 1521(a), in turn, provides that âthe court may, at the request of the foreign representative, grant any appropriate relief.â (Emphasis added). He asserts that he ânever asked the bankruptcy court to include § 365 in its Supplemental Order or sought other relief relating to § 365(n)â such that the Licensees would have the option to retain their licenses under Qimondaâs U.S. patents. Thus, according to JaffĂ©, because application of § 365 was not specifically requested by him, the bankruptcy courtâs sua sponte inclusion of § 365 was legal error, the correction of which must precede any consideration of § 1522(a)âs sufficient protection requirement.
We believe that JaffĂ©âs view of the relationship between § 1521(a) and § 1522(a) is too myopic. While it is true that JaffĂ© ânever affirmatively requested rejection authority under § 365,â he did request several forms of discretionary relief under § 1521, among which was the privilege, pursuant to § 1521(a)(5), to have the bankruptcy court entrust him with â[t]he administration or realization of all or part of the assets of [Qimonda] within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States,â specifically identifying the companyâs U.S. patents as among the U.S. assets he sought to control. And, as a prerequisite to awarding any § 1521 relief, the court was required to .ensure sufficient protection of the creditors and the debtor. Section 1522(a) states this explicitly, providing in relevant part, âThe court may grant relief under section ... 1521 ... only if the interests of the creditors and other interested entities, including the debtor, are sufficiently protected.â 11 U.S.C. § 1522(a) (emphasis added). Additionally, the court was authorized to âsubjectâ any § 1521 relief âto conditions it considers appropriate.â Id. § 1522(b); see also H.R.Rep. No. 109-31, pt. 1, at 116 (describing § 1522 as âgiv[ing] the bankruptcy court broad latitude to mold relief to meet specific circumstances, including appropriate responses if it is shown that the foreign proceeding is seriously and unjustifiably injuring United States creditorsâ).
This is precisely what the bankruptcy court did here.' It granted discretionary relief under § 1521 and, as mandated, considered the question of sufficient protection under § 1522(a). Upon such consideration, it conditioned its § 1521 relief on application of § 365(n), finding that such protection was appropriate in the circumstances presented.
To be sure, the bankruptcy court did not frame its initial inclusion of § 365 in the
The bankruptcy courtâs consideration of § 1522(a) was thus undoubtedly appropriate when authorizing relief under § 1521.
B
JaffĂ© next contends that even if the bankruptcy court was correct to consider § 1522âs sufficient protection requirement in granting § 1521 relief, the court nonetheless employed the wrong test in applying § 1522(a). He maintains that the bankruptcy courtâs âruling fundamentally misunderstood] the âinterestsâ § 1522(a) protectsâ by failing to recognize that § 1522(a) is merely a procedural protection âdesigned to ensure that all creditors [could] participate in the bankruptcy distribution on an equal footing â and thus should not be used to protect parties from the substantive bankruptcy law that would otherwise apply in the foreign main proceeding. (Emphasis added). He asserts that â[disregarding foreign law based on an open-ended balancing test under § 1522(a) is contrary to Chapter 15âs basic design,â which, according to JaffĂ©, requires U.S. courts to defer to foreign substantive law except only as allowed under § 1506, which provides a narrow exception when the courtâs action would otherwise violate âthe most fundamental policies of the United States.â H.R.Rep. No. 109-31, pt. 1, at 109. In sum, he argues (1) that the bankruptcy court erred by interpreting § 1522âs sufficient protection requirement as incorporating a balancing test that could achieve a result that treated creditors differently and that would therefore be in tension with German law, and (2) that, to the extent § 1522(a) was implicated at all, the bankruptcy court should have limited its analysis to ensuring that the doors of the German insolvency proceeding would be open to the Licensees on equal footing with Qimondaâs other creditors.
JaffĂ©âs theory of how the sufficient protection requirement of § 1522(a) operates is not illogical. The text of the statute is broad and somewhat ambiguous regarding the test that courts should employ to determine âif the interests of the creditors and other interested entities, including the debtor, are sufficiently protected.â 11 U.S.C. § 1522(a). But we are not convinced that JaffĂ©âs theory can fully be squared with the text or with Congressâs intent in enacting the text.
Section 1522(a) requires the bankruptcy court to ensure the protection of both the creditors and the debtor. 11 U.S.C. § 1522(a). The provision thus requires the court to ensure that the relief a foreign representative requests under § 1521 does not impinge excessively on any one entityâs interests, implying that each entity must receive at least some protection. And because the interests of the creditors and the interests of the debt- or are often antagonistic, as they are here, providing protection to one side might well come at some expense to the other. The analysis required by § 1522(a) is therefore logically best done by balancing the re
We also find support for this interpretation in the Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency, on which Chapter 15 was based. In enacting Chapter 15, Congress stated that it intended to codify the Model Law. See 11 U.S.C. § 1501(a). And, in doing so, it also indicated strongly that the Model Law, and the accompanying Guide to Enactment issued by UNCITRAL in conjunction with its adoption of the Model Law, should inform our interpretation of Chapter 15âs provisions. Indeed, Chapter 15 provides that â[i]n interpreting this chapter, the court shall consider its international origin, and the need to promote an application of this chapter that is consistent with the application of similar statutes adopted by foreign jurisdictions.â Id. § 1508; see also H.R.Rep. No. 109-31, pt. 1, at 109-10 (âInterpretation of this chapter on a uniform basis will be aided by reference to the Guide and the Reports cited therein, which explain the reasons for the terms used and often cite their origins as well.... To the extent that the United States courts rely on these sources, their decisions will more likely be regarded as persuasive elsewhereâ (emphasis added)). Thus, the Model Law and its Guide to Enactment also provide relevant guidance in determining the appropriate meaning of Chapter 15âs provisions.
The Guide to Enactment contains a number of paragraphs that bear directly on the question of how a court should assess the interests of others and protect them prior to granting the discretionary relief sought by a foreign representative. For example, the Guide acknowledges that the representative of a foreign main proceeding will ânormally seek[ ] to gain control over all assets of the insolvent debtor.â Guide to Enactment ¶ 158, at 347. But it stresses that the Model Law makes â[t]he âturnoverâ of assets to the foreign representative discretionary,â adding that âthe Model Law contains several safeguards designed to ensure the protection of local interests before assets are turned over to the foreign representative.â Id. ¶ 157, at 347 (emphasis added). Chief among those âsafeguardsâ is Article 22 of the Model Law, which is largely codified as § 1522.
Informed by the Guide to Enactmentâs description of the relationship between Articles 22 and 6 of the Model Law (§§ 1522 and 1506 in the U.S. Bankruptcy Code), we do not share JaffĂ©âs view that § 1506âs public policy exception forecloses use of a balancing analysis under § 1522. Contrary to JaffĂ©âs position, Chapter 15 does not require a U.S. bankruptcy court, in considering a foreign representativeâs request for discretionary relief under § 1521, to blind itself to the costs that awarding such relief would impose on others under the rule provided by the substantive law of the State where the foreign insolvency proceeding is pending. Instead, Chapter 15, like the Model Law, anticipates the provision of particularized protection, as stated in § 1522(a).
We therefore conclude, through interpretation of § 1522(a)âs text and consideration of Chapter 15âs international origin, that the district court correctly interpreted § 1522(a)âs sufficient protection requirement as requiring a particularized balancing analysis that considers the âinterests of the creditors and other interested entities, including the debtor,â 11 U.S.C. § 1522(a), and, in this case in particular, a weighing of the interests of the foreign representative (the debtor) in receiving the requested relief against the competing interests of those who would be adversely affected by the grant of such relief (here, the Licensees). And we also agree that § 1506 is an additional, more general protection of U.S. interests that may be evaluated apart from the particularized analysis of § 1522(a).
In reaching this conclusion, we join the Fifth Circuit, which interpreted § 1522(a) similarly, based largely on the language in the Guide to Enactment. See In re Vitro S.A.B. de C.V., 701 F.3d 1031, 1060, 1067 n. 42 (5th Cir.2012); see also In re Intâl Banking Corp. B.S.C., 439 B.R. 614, 626-27 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.2010); In re Tri-Contâl Exch. Ltd., 349 B.R. 627, 637 (Bankr. E.D.Cal.2006).
C
Finally, JaffĂ© contends that the bankruptcy courtâs balancing analysis, even if assumed appropriate, was flawed in implementation. He argues that the court dramatically overstated the risk to the Licenseesâ investments made in reliance on the cross-license agreements, especially in light of his offer to re-license Qimondaâs U.S. patents to the Licensees at a RAND royalty rate. In this regard, he maintains that the courtâs balancing analysis failed to recognize that â § 1522(a) requires courts to protect the interests of all âcreditors and other interested entities, including the debtorâ â not just one set of contracting parties.â
The Licensees respond, arguing that âthe bankruptcy court properly recognized that Dr. JaffĂ©âs offer to relicense did not change the