Court Opinion

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Opinions of the United
2003 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
                                                                                                                              for the Third Circuit

1-9-2003

In Re: United Artist
Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential

Docket 01-1351

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PRECEDENTIAL

       Filed January 9, 2003

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT

No. 01-1351

IN RE: UNITED ARTISTS THEATRE COMPANY, et al.,

       Debtors

v.

*DONALD F. WALTON, Acting United States Trustee
for Region 3

*Donald F. Walton,

       Appellant

*(Substituted Pursuant to F.R.A.P. 43(c))

Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Delaware
(Del. Bankr. No. 00-03514)
District Judge: Honorable Sue L. Robinson

Argued: December 4, 2001

Before: ALITO, RENDELL, and AMBRO, Circuit Judges

(Opinion Filed: January 9, 2003)

       James H.M. Sprayregen
       James W. Kapp, III (Argued)
       David J. Zott
       Kirkland & Ellis
       200 East Randolph Drive
       Suite 6500
       Chicago, IL 60601

       Counsel for Appellee
       United Artists Theatre Company,
       et al.

       Richard A. Chesley (Argued)
       Houlihan Lokey Howard & Zukin
       123 North Wacker Drive
       4th Floor
       Chicago, IL 60606

       Counsel for Appellee
       Houlihan Lokey Howard & Zukin

       Bruce G. Forrest (Argued)
       United States Department of Justice
       Civil Division, Appellate Staff
       601 D Street, N.W.
       Washington, DC 20530

       Counsel for Appellant
       Acting United States Trustee

OPINION OF THE COURT

AMBRO, Circuit Judge:

The United States Trustee (the "U.S. Trustee") 1 appeals
the District Court of Delaware’s approval of a bankruptcy
debtor’s application to retain a financial advisor.
Specifically, the U.S. Trustee objects to the debtor’s
agreement to indemnify the financial advisor for claims of
negligence (as opposed to gross negligence) that may be
_________________________________________________________________

1. Patricia A. Staiano was the U.S. Trustee at the time of briefing, but
her term expired on October 5, 2001. Her current replacement is Acting
U.S. Trustee Donald F. Walton.

                                2

leveled against it. We first address whether the U.S. Trustee
has standing to bring this suit, and determine that he does.
Next we examine whether subsequent confirmation of the
reorganization plan renders this case constitutionally or
equitably moot. After concluding that it is not moot in
either sense, we turn to the merits of the U.S. Trustee’s
appeal. We affirm the District Court’s ruling that the
indemnification provision is permissible, though we do so in
a way that eschews the inherent imprecision between
shades of negligence. In so doing, we borrow from corporate
law analogues, and focus on the process by which financial
advisors reach their opinions rather than on the substance
of the opinions themselves.

I. Background

United Artists Theatre Company and affiliates2
(collectively, the "Debtors" or "United Artists") filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the District Court.3 At
the outset the Debtors requested court approval of their
retention of Houlihan, Lokey, Howard & Zukin Capital
("Houlihan Lokey") as financial advisor. The engagement
letter provided that United Artists would indemnify
_________________________________________________________________

2. These affiliates are United Artists Theatre Circuit, Inc., United Artists
Realty Company, United Artists Properties I Corp., United Artists
Properties II Corp., UAB, Inc., UAB II, Inc., Mamaroneck Playhouse
Holding Corporation, Tallthe Inc., UA Theatre Amusements, Inc., UA
International Property Holding, Inc., UA Property Holding II, Inc., United
Artists International Management Company, Beth Page Theatre Co., Inc.,
United Film Distribution Company of South America, U.A.P.R., Inc., R
and S Theatres, Inc., and King Reavis Amusement Company.
3. The District Court of Delaware’s relationship with the United States
Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware has a checkered past. The
District Court revoked the automatic reference of bankruptcy cases to
the Bankruptcy Court effective February 3, 1997. In December of 2000,
the District Court reinstated the automatic referral, and then revoked it
once more in April of 2001. An order dated September 6, 2001 again
reinstated the automatic reference. Revoking the automatic reference
means in practical terms that bankruptcy cases are assigned to the
District Court unless, on a case-by-case basis, they are referred to the
Bankruptcy Court. The District Court retained this case, which was filed
while the reference revocation was in effect.

                                3

Houlihan Lokey’s reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses,
as well as any losses incurred by Houlihan Lokey with
respect to, inter alia, its providing of services. The letter
also contained an exception for "any Losses that are finally
judicially determined to have resulted from the gross
negligence, bad faith, willful misfeasance, or reckless
disregard of its obligations or duties on the part of
Houlihan Lokey."4
_________________________________________________________________

4. The principal indemnity provisions of the retention agreement are as
follows:

       (a) If Houlihan Lokey or any employee, agent, officer, director,
       attorney, shareholder or any person who controls Houlihan
       Lokey (any or all of the foregoing, hereinafter an"Indemnified
       Person") becomes involved in any capacity in any legal or
       administrative action, suit, proceeding, investigation or inquiry,
       regardless of the legal theory or the allegations made in
       connection therewith, directly or indirectly in connection with,
       arising out of, based upon, or in any way related to (i) the
       Agreement; (ii) the services that are the subject of the
       Agreement; (iii) any document or information, whether verbal or
       written, referred to herein or supplied to Houlihan Lokey; (iv)
       the breach of the representations, warranties or covenants by
       the Company given pursuant hereto; (v) Houlihan Lokey’s
       involvement in the Transaction or any part thereof; (vi) any
       filings made by or on behalf of any party with any governmental
       agency in connection with the Transaction; (vii) the Transaction;
       or (viii) proceedings by or on behalf of any creditors or equity
       holders of the Company, the Company will on demand, advance
       or pay promptly, on behalf of each Indemnified Person,
       reasonable attorneys’ fees and other expenses and
       disbursements (including, but not limited to, the cost of any
       investigation and related preparation) as they are incurred by
       the Indemnified Person. The Company also indemnifies and
       holds harmless each Indemnified Person against any and all
       losses, claims, damages, liabilities, costs and expenses
       (including, but not limited to, attorneys’ fees, disbursements
       and court costs, and costs of investigation and preparation)
       ("Losses") to which such Indemnified Person may become
       subject in connection with any such matter.

       (b) If for any reason the foregoing indemnification is determined to
       be unavailable to any Indemnified Person or insufficient fully to
       indemnify any such person, then the Company will contribute
       to the amount paid or payable by such person as a result of

                                4

The U.S. Trustee objected, claiming, inter alia , that the
retention agreement exempted Houlihan Lokey from liability
_________________________________________________________________

       any such Losses in such proportion as is appropriate to reflect
       (i) the relationship between Houlihan Lokey’s fee on the one
       hand and the aggregate value of the Transaction on the other
       hand or (ii) if the allocation provided by clause (i) is not
       permitted by applicable law, not only such relative benefit but
       also the relative fault of the other participants in the
       Transaction, on the one hand, and Houlihan Lokey and the
       Indemnified Persons on the other hand, and any other relevant
       equitable considerations in connection with the matters as to
       which such Losses relate; provided, however, that in no event
       shall the amount to be contributed by all Indemnified Persons
       in the aggregate exceed the amount of the fees actually received
       by Houlihan Lokey hereunder.

       (c) Any Indemnified Person shall have the right to employ such
       person’s own separate counsel in any such action, at the
       Company’s expense, and such counsel shall have the right to
       have charge of such matters for such person.

       (d) The indemnification obligations hereunder shall not apply to
       any Losses that are finally judicially determined to have
       resulted from the gross negligence, bad faith, willful
       misfeasance, or reckless disregard of its obligations or duties on
       the part of Houlihan Lokey or such Indemnified Person. In the
       event of such final judicial determination, the Company shall,
       subject to Houlihan Lokey’s rights of contribution, be entitled to
       recover from the Indemnified Person or Houlihan Lokey the
       costs and expenses paid on behalf of such Indemnified Person
       pursuant to this indemnification obligation.

In addition, United Artists’ application to retain Houlihan Lokey
supplemented the gross negligence and willful misconduct carveouts for
indemnity in subparagraph (d) above by providing that, in the case of a
judicial determination, it must be final and find that either the gross
negligence or willful misconduct is "solely" the cause of any claim or
expense of Houlihan Lokey. The order approving the application contains
the same language.

The application and order also provide indemnity to Houlihan Lokey
for its "prepetition performance of services." The U.S. Trustee, however,
appeals only whether "indemnification provisions, holding a financial
advisor harmless for the consequences of its negligence in connection
with services it provides to the debtors in a bankruptcy proceeding," are
reasonable under 11 U.S.C. S 328(a)(emphasis added).

                                5

for its own negligence, thus violating the Bankruptcy Code,
public policy, and basic tenets of professionalism.
Specifically, it argued that the agreement was unreasonable
under two provisions of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C.
SS 327(a) and 328(a), because allowing a debtor’s estate to
indemnify a financial advisor for its own negligence
undermines the principal purpose of bankruptcy --
conserving the debtor’s assets in order to pay its creditors.
The District Court, rejecting the U.S. Trustee’s objections,
approved the Debtors’ retention of Houlihan Lokey in a
memorandum order dated December 1, 2000 (though not
entered on the docket until December 8, 2000). The
Debtors’ cases then proceeded as "prenegotiated"
bankruptcies.5 The confirmation hearing for the Debtors’
second amended joint plan of reorganization ("the Plan")
was held on January 22, 2001. The District Court
confirmed the Plan that day (though the order was not
docketed until January 25, 2001). On February 5, 2001,
the U.S. Trustee filed this appeal.

At the time of Plan confirmation the U.S. Trustee did not
object to several provisions releasing Houlihan Lokey from
liability. Article X(B) provided:
_________________________________________________________________

5. "Prenegotiated" bankruptcies have plans of reorganization and
disclosure statements filed shortly after the cases themselves file,
usually before the committee of unsecured creditors is formed. In re
Pioneer Fin. Corp., 246 B.R. 626, 630 (Bankr. D. Nev. 2000); see also
Report of the Del. State Bar Ass’n to the Nat’l Bankr. Rev. Comm’n in
Support of Maintaining Existing Venue Choices 18 n.39 (October 3,
1996). This contrasts with typical Chapter 11 cases, where a plan and
disclosure statement are filed many months (sometimes years) after the
cases are filed, and "prepackaged bankruptcies" (or "prepacks"), where
the plan and disclosure statement are filed, and sufficient favorable votes
on the plan are solicited and obtained, before the Chapter 11 case
begins, leading to a prompt plan confirmation. See generally Marcia L.
Goldstein et al., Prepackaged Chapter 11 Case Considerations and
Techniques, in 1 Weil, Gotshal & Manges, LLP, Reorganizing Failing
Businesses ch. 12 (Marvin E. Jacob & Sharon Youdelman eds. 1998);
Alesia Ranney-Marinelli, Prepackaged Plans of Reorganization, in A
Practical Guide to Out-Of-Court Restructurings and Prepackaged Plans of
Reorganization S 4.01[A], at 4-9 (Nicholas P. Saggese & Alesia Ranney-
Marinelli eds., 2d ed. 2000).

                                6

       [O]n and after the Effective Date, each of the Debtors,
       the Reorganized Debtors, their subsidiaries, their
       affiliates, and the Releasees, and the agents, officers,
       directors, partners, members, professionals, and
       agents of the foregoing (and the officers, directors,
       partners, members, professionals, and agents of each
       thereof), for good and valuable consideration . . . shall
       automatically be deemed to have released each other
       unconditionally and forever from any and all Claims,
       obligations, rights, suits, damages, Causes of Action,
       remedies and liabilities whatsoever, whether liquidated
       or unliquidated, fixed or contingent, matured or
       unmatured, known or unknown, foreseen or
       unforeseen, existing or hereafter arising, in law, equity
       or otherwise, that any of the foregoing entities would
       have been legally entitled to assert (in their own right,
       whether individually or collectively, or on behalf of any
       Holder of any Claim or Equity Interest or other Person
       or Entity), based in whole or in part upon any act or
       omission, transaction, agreement, event or other
       occurrence taking place on or before the Effective Date,
       relating in any way to the Debtors, the Reorganized
       Debtors, the Chapter 11 Cases, the Plan, the
       Disclosure Statement, or any related agreements,
       instruments or other documents . . . .

Article X(C) read as follows:

       On and after the Effective Date, each Holder of a Claim
       who has accepted the Plan, in exchange for, among
       other things, a distribution under the Plan, shall be
       deemed to have released unconditionally each of the
       Debtors, the Reorganized Debtors . . . and the agents,
       officers, directors, partners, members, professionals,
       and agents of the foregoing (and the officers, directors,
       partners, members, professionals, and agents of each
       thereof), from any and all Claims, obligations, rights,
       suits, damages, Causes of Action, remedies and
       liabilities whatsoever, whether liquidated or
       unliquidated, fixed or contingent, matured or
       unmatured, known or unknown, foreseen or
       unforeseen, existing or hereafter arising, in law, equity
       or otherwise . . . .

                                  7

Finally, Article X(E) provided:

       The Debtors, . . . their members and Professionals
       (acting in such capacity) shall neither have nor incur
       any liability to any Person or Entity for any act taken
       or omitted to be taken in connection with or related to
       the formulation, preparation, dissemination,
       implementation, administration, Confirmation or
       Consummation of the Plan, the Disclosure Statement
       or any contract, instrument, release or other agreement
       or document created or entered into in connection with
       the Plan . . . or any other act taken or omitted to be
       taken in connection with the Chapter 11 Cases;
       provided, however, that the foregoing provisions of
       [this] Article X.E . . . shall have no effect on the liability
       of any Person or Entity that results from any such act
       or omission that is determined in a Final Order to have
       constituted gross negligence or willful misconduct.

We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. S 1291
because the District Court’s approval of a professional’s
retention is a final order. We review the District Court’s
approval under SS 327(a) and 328(a) of the Bankruptcy
Code for abuse of discretion, but review its legal
determinations de novo. In re PWS Holding Corp., 228 F.3d
224, 235 (3d Cir. 2000).
II. Standing and Mootness

A. Standing

While Houlihan Lokey couches its argument solely in
terms of mootness, reading closely we find a separate
component of its argument: standing. It contends that a
suit against it "could only be brought by someone
proximately harmed by Houlihan’s negligence in performing
these services, i.e., an actual or potential financial
stakeholder of the UA Debtors." Appellee’s Br. at 6. By
virtue of the releases it obtained, it reasons, no such
stakeholder can sue. Because the U.S. Trustee’s appeal
relies upon these potential claims, Houlihan Lokey
therefore argues that the U.S. Trustee lacks standing.
Houlihan Lokey also questions the U.S. Trustee’s standing
more obliquely, observing that "[i]ndeed, it is of more than

                                8

passing interest that the party threatening to now disrupt
this confirmed and effective plan is one with no such
economic stake." Appellee’s Br. at 12.

Contrary to Houlihan Lokey’s claim, the U.S. Trustee
"may raise and may appear and be heard on any issue in
any case or proceeding." 11 U.S.C. S 307. A lack of
pecuniary interest in the outcome of a bankruptcy
proceeding does not deny the U.S. Trustee standing. See In
re Columbia Gas Sys. Inc., 33 F.3d 294, 295-96 (3d Cir.
1994). U.S. Trustees are officers of the Department of
Justice who protect the public interest by aiding
bankruptcy judges in monitoring certain aspects of
bankruptcy proceedings. Id.; accord In re Revco Drug Stores,
Inc., 898 F.2d 498, 499-500 (6th Cir. 1990). Thus, we find
that the U.S. Trustee has standing to challenge the
indemnification provision,6 and turn to the issue of
mootness.

B. Mootness

Houlihan Lokey argues that the case is both
constitutionally and equitably moot. The first issue is a
question of constitutional significance because, if a case is
moot, we lack the power to hear it. Equitable mootness is
a more limited inquiry into whether, though we have the
power to hear a case, the equities weigh against upsetting
a bankruptcy plan that has already been confirmed. We
address each issue in turn.

1. Constitutional Mootness

The United States Supreme Court sets a high threshold
for judging a case moot. An appeal is moot in the
constitutional sense only if events have taken place that
make it "impossible for the court to grant any effectual
relief whatever." Church of Scientology of Cal. v. United
States, 506 U.S. 9, 12 (1992) (citation omitted). An appeal
is not moot "merely because a court cannot restore the
parties to the status quo ante [the state in which it was
_________________________________________________________________

6. We note that in In re Metricom, Inc., 275 B.R. 364, 368 (Bankr. N.D.
Cal. 2002), Houlihan Lokey implicitly acknowledged the U.S. Trustee’s
standing to object by responding to its objections with proposed
modifications.

                                9

before]. Rather, when a court can fashion some form of
meaningful relief, even if it only partially redresses the
grievances of the prevailing party, the appeal is not moot."
In re Continental Airlines, 91 F.3d 553, 558 (3d Cir. 1996)
(en banc) ("Continental I") (citations and quotation marks
omitted).

Houlihan Lokey asserts that this case is moot because
Articles X(B), X(C), and X(E) of the confirmed Plan contain
releases that preclude potential negligence claims against
it. The U.S. Trustee counters that meaningful relief may
still be obtained because the retention order may be
vacated, at least as to the indemnification provision. With
respect to Houlihan Lokey’s Article X(C) argument, 7 that
Article by its own terms subjects Houlihan Lokey to
potential suits. Because Article X(C) releases the Debtors
and their professionals from suits by "each Holder of a
Claim who has accepted the Plan" (emphasis added), it does
not bind all holders of claims. Rather, it covers only those
who accept the Plan. Houlihan Lokey is correct that the
"UA Plan was accepted by each impaired class that was
entitled to vote," Appellee’s Br. at 8 n.2, but its point that
each class is bound (regardless whether a member
objected) misses the mark, even for those objecting who
receive distributions under the Plan. If a class member
accepts distributions because it is bound by the cram down
provisions of S 1129(b)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code (i.e., a
procedure for nonconsensual confirmation of a plan of
reorganization), but it has not itself accepted the Plan,
Article X(C)’s release does not apply to it. Thirty-four
unsecured creditors voted to reject the Plan, and thus are
unaffected by the release. Because by its own terms the
release allows future claims, and in any event we can
provide relief by modifying the retention order, Article X(C)
does not render this case constitutionally moot.
_________________________________________________________________

7. We do not focus on Article X(B), which contains a mutual release of all
claims among the Debtors, their affiliates, and the Releasees (defined to
include "the D&O Releasees, the Prepetition Lender Releasees, the
Placement Agent Releasees, Stonington, the Subordinated Note
Releasees, and the Equity Releasees") because it does not affect all
creditor constituencies.

                                10

Next, Houlihan Lokey argues that Article X(E) of the Plan
moots the U.S. Trustee’s challenge because it excepts
from liability (with a carveout for gross negligence and
willful misconduct) "[t]he Debtors . . . and their . . .
Professionals (acting in such capacity) . . . for any act taken
or omitted to be taken in connection with or related to the
formulation, preparation, dissemination, implementation,
administration, Confirmation or Consummation of the Plan
. . . or . . . the Chapter 11 Cases." It applies to Houlihan
Lokey, albeit only when acting in a "professional" capacity.8

Even on its own terms, Article X(E) contains carveouts
(i.e., no forbearance from or tolerance of liability caused by
willful misconduct or gross negligence). The question in the
appeal comes full circle: can as a matter of public policy a
professional be exempt from its own negligence. The answer
depends on how we treat nonconsensual releases of
nondebtors.

Debtors and their professionals cannot exempt
themselves from liability to non-consenting parties merely
by saying the word. The "hallmarks of permissible non-
consensual releases" are "fairness, necessity to the
reorganization, and specific factual findings to support
these conclusions." In re Continental Airlines, 203 F.3d 203,
214 (3d Cir. 2000) ("Continental II"). Added to these
requirements is that the releases "were given in exchange
for fair consideration." Id. at 215. As in Continental II, here
no finding in the confirmation order specifically addressed
the releases at issue.9 Id. Releases unbacked by adequate
findings of fairness, necessity to reorganization and
reasonable consideration cannot moot a challenge to the
retention agreement’s indemnity. What may not be valid
(releases lacking the findings Continental II requires) ipso
_________________________________________________________________

8. Thus Houlihan Lokey is not a "professional" when it is acting in its
own interest, e.g., buying and selling claims.

9. The order confirming the Plan does provide, interestingly under
"Conclusions of Law," that the "releases . . . set forth in the Plan . . .
shall be, and hereby are, approved as fair, equitable, reasonable and in
the best interests of the Debtors . . . and their . . . Creditors . . . ."

                                11

facto cannot moot an indemnity agreement whose order
approving it was not final until after confirmation. 10

While the merits of this appeal would have been
singularly focused had the U.S. Trustee objected to the
pertinent release provisions at confirmation, the bottom line
is that the U.S. Trustee did object (and strenuously) to the
scope of the indemnity demanded by Houlihan Lokey.
Potential claimants still exist. Reforming the indemnity
provision would accord them meaningful relief. Therefore
this case is not constitutionally moot.

2. Equitable Mootness
We next examine equitable mootness. In this analysis,
emphasis is decidedly on the first term of the phrase --
whether the requested relief is equitable. "The use of the
word ‘mootness’ as a shortcut for a court’s decision that the
_________________________________________________________________

10. It could be argued that in In re PWS Holding Corp., 228 F.3d 224,
246 (3d Cir. 2000), we found an analogous release to be permissible
under S 524(e). However, PWS’s holding makes clear that it was not
addressing a release that "affect[s] the liability of third [i.e., non-debtor]
parties," id. at 247, and thus "is outside the scope of S 524(e)." Id. In
discussing Continental II, the PWS panel noted that "[w]e did not treat
S 524(e) as a per se rule barring any provision in a reorganization plan
limiting the liability of third parties." Id. Rather, "it was clear under any
rule that the court might adopt that the [third party] releases at issue
were impermissible because ‘the hallmarks of permissible non-
consensual releases--fairness, necessity to the reorganization, and
specific factual findings to support these conclusions--are all absent
here.’ " Id. (quoting Continental II, 203 F.3d at 214).

More to the point, PWS did address the standard of liability for creditor
committee members under S 1103(c) of the Bankruptcy Code, holding
that this provision "limits liability of a committee to willful misconduct
or ultra vires acts." PWS, 228 F.3d at 246. While it is unclear whether
the Court meant to include professionals to committees as well (the very
next sentence refers to "the entities that provided services to the
Committee in the event that they were sued for their participation in the
reorganization," id. at 246-47) and whether the rubric "ultra vires acts"
is intended to cover any form of negligence, in no event does PWS cover
more than immunity from liability under S 1103(c). The level of
indemnity of professionals a debtor employs underS 327 is what is at
issue in this case. Therefore, we cannot hold that the release moots an
issue we have not yet examined.

                                12

fait accompli of a plan confirmation should preclude further
judicial proceedings has led to unfortunate confusion."
Continental I, 91 F.3d at 559. "[T]here is a big difference
between inability to alter the outcome (real mootness) and
unwillingness to alter the outcome (‘equitable mootness’).
Using one word for two different concepts breeds
confusion." Id. (quoting In re UNR Indus., Inc., 20 F.3d 766,
769 (7th Cir. 1994))(emphases in original). Here we have
the power to alter the outcome because the case is not
constitutionally moot, but we must balance the equities of
both positions and determine whether it is prudent to upset
the Plan at this date. We consider five factors

       in determining whether it would be equitable or
       prudential to reach the merits of a bankruptcy appeal
       . . . [:] (1) whether the reorganization plan has been
       substantially consummated, (2) whether a stay has
       been obtained, (3) whether the relief requested would
       affect the rights of parties not before the court, (4)
       whether the relief requested would affect the success of
       the plan, and (5) the public policy of affording finality
       to bankruptcy judgments.
Continental I, 91 F.3d at 560. In Continental I, we
recognized that reversing a plan’s confirmation might
"knock the props out from under" "intricate and involved
transactions," the consummation of which is relied on by
the marketplace. Id. at 561 (quoting In re Roberts Farms,
Inc., 652 F.2d 793, 797 (9th Cir. 1981)).

In In re PWS Holding Corp., we rejected an equitable
mootness claim in a case involving, as already noted supra
n.10, a challenge to aspects of releases of liability of
creditor committees and possibly their professionals. 228
F.3d 224, 236-37 (3d Cir. 2000). There we observed that
"[t]he plan has been substantially consummated, but . . .
[it] could go forward even if the releases were struck." Id. at
236-37. We therefore declined to dismiss on equitable
mootness grounds.

The relief the U.S. Trustee seeks here does not entail
"knocking [out] the props" under the Plan. He only requests
that the provision indemnifying Houlihan Lokey for
negligent conduct be stricken from its retention agreement.

                                13

If we were to modify the indemnity provision, the Plan
otherwise would survive intact.

The remaining factors do not persuasively challenge this
result. The fact that the U.S. Trustee did not obtain a stay
weighs against it, but because the remedy it seeks does not
undermine the Plan’s foundation, this omission is not fatal.
Moreover, allowing a challenge on public policy grounds to
an indemnity provision is itself sound public policy. In this
context, there is no equity in mooting the U.S. Trustee’s
challenge to the indemnity provision sought by Houlihan
Lokey.

III. Permissibility of Debtors’ Indemnifying
Financial Advisors for Their Own Negligence

Having concluded that the U.S. Trustee has standing to
bring this appeal and that the issue is not moot, we turn to
whether the indemnification provision was permissible. This
is an issue of first impression for this Court. 11 Section
328(a) of the Bankruptcy Code requires that the terms and
conditions of employment of any professionals engaged
under S 327 be "reasonable." 11 U.S.C.S 328(a). The
question we therefore ask is whether it is reasonable for the
Debtors to indemnify Houlihan Lokey despite its own
negligence (but not gross negligence).

Both parties make plausible points on the issue. The U.S.
Trustee argues that allowing professionals to obtain
indemnity for their own negligence encourages a standard
both lax and "inconsistent with the financial advisor’s
fiduciary obligations to the creditors." Appellant’s Br. at 24.
Houlihan Lokey worries that the courts might "Monday-
morning quarterback," or second-guess, decisions that in
hindsight were clearly mistaken, but at the time seemed
attractive options. Financial advisors would then be
_________________________________________________________________

11. A bankruptcy appellate panel of the Eighth Circuit, Unsecured
Creditors Committee. v. Pelofsky (In re Thermadyne Holdings Corp.), 283
B.R. 749 (B.A.P. 8th Cir. 2002), considered whether Houlihan Lokey, the
financial advisor to a creditors’ committee, could obtain indemnity for,
inter alia, simple negligence. The B.A.P. held that it was not an abuse of
discretion for the bankruptcy court to disapprove such expanded
indemnity under the circumstances of that case.

                                14

constrained and overly conservative in their advice, thus
disadvantaging the estate.

Though heretofore we have not addressed in depth the
reasonableness of indemnifying financial advisors, we have
recognized that S 330, which deals with what constitutes
"reasonable" compensation for professionals, takes a
"market-driven" approach. In re Busy Beaver Bldg. Ctrs.,
Inc. 19 F.3d 833, 852 (3d Cir. 1994). While this case dealt
with the reasonableness of paralegals’ compensation, rather
than their indemnification, it underscores that some
reference to the market is not out of place when considering
whether terms of retention are "reasonable" in the
bankruptcy context.

Indemnification of financial advisors against their own
negligent conduct is becoming a common market
occurrence. In re Joan and David Halpern Inc. , 248 B.R. 43,
47 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2000), aff ’d, No. 00-10961 SMB, 2000
WL 1800690 (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 4, 2000)). These provisions are
of relatively recent origin, spurred by the In re Merry-Go-
Round Enterprises, Inc. settlement of a suit against
accountants advising the estate. 244 B.R. 327 (Bankr. D.
Md. 2000). Where previously there was no great concern
with bankruptcy professionals being sued for negligence,
after Merry-Go-Round professionals worried that suits would
occur frequently, and they sought to lessen their potential
liability by contracting for indemnification. See Joseph A.
Guzinski, The United States Trustees: Ongoing Challenges,
in 23rd Annual Current Developments in Bankruptcy and
Reorganization 251, 274 (PLI Commercial Law and Practice
Course, Handbook Series No. 820, 2001) ("In re Merry-Go-
Round served as a kind of wake up call for bankruptcy
specialists . . . . Fearing exposure to similar claims,
specialists . . . have sought indemnification by the company
filing the bankruptcy."); Kurt F. Gwynne, Indemnification
and Exculpation of Professional Persons in Bankruptcy
Cases, 10 ABI L. Rev. 711, 727-29 (2002); Shanon D.
Murray, U.S. Trustee Watchdog Starting to Bite, Some Say,
N.Y.L.J., May 3, 2001, at 5 (stating that "the current
movement of restructuring advisers who want to be
indemnified for their bankruptcy work stems from a $4
billion fraud, negligence and malpractice case that a

                                15
regional trustee brought against Ernst & Young for its role
in the bankruptcy proceedings of Merry-Go-Round").

However, that indemnification provisions like Houlihan
Lokey’s are now common in the marketplace does not
automatically make them "reasonable" underS 328.12 Our
approach is "market driven," not "market-determined,"
especially in the realm of bankruptcy, where courts play a
special supervisory role. With the understanding and
limitations set out below, we believe Houlihan Lokey’s
indemnification agreement to be reasonable and therefore
permissible under S 328. In coming to this conclusion, we
revisit traditional negligence/gross negligence analysis,
borrowing from Delaware corporate law, and emphasizing
that the indemnity provision leaves the door open to
examining the level of care financial advisors exercise in the
process of obtaining the results, rather than the results
themselves. We look to Delaware corporate law as a guide
primarily because it offers time-tested insights on how
courts should best evaluate an issue similar to the one
before us.13 Additionally, Delaware’s law often cues the
market.

Directors and officers in Delaware may obtain indemnity
for their own negligence.14 Section 145(a) of Delaware
_________________________________________________________________

12. See, e.g., Unsecured Creditors Comm. v. Pelofsky (In re Thermadyne
Holdings Corp.), 283 B.R. 749 (B.A.P. 8th Cir. 2002); In re Metricom, Inc.,
275 B.R. 364 (Bankr. N.D. Cal. 2002) (rejecting indemnification of
Houlihan Lokey, advisor to the bondholders’ committee, as unreasonable
where the debtor and official committee of unsecured trade creditors
retained two other financial advisors without such indemnification
agreements, and there was no showing that such an agreement was
necessary). Cf. In re Comdisco, Inc., 2002 WL 31109431 (N.D. Ill. Sept.
23, 2002) (reasonableness of indemnity for professional advisors depends
on the facts of each case); In re DEC International, Inc., 282 B.R. 423
(W.D. Wis. 2002) (indemnity of bankruptcy professionals not per se
unreasonable but must be scrutinized with care).

13. While the retention agreement between United Artists and Houlihan
Lokey purports to be governed by New York law, our opinion relates to
what is reasonable under S 328(a) of the Bankruptcy Code. As this
without doubt is a matter of federal law, we need not examine New York
law, and only refer to Delaware corporate law as a useful analogue.

14. Though directors and officers are fiduciaries of the corporations they
serve, we do not hold financial advisors like Houlihan Lokey to be

                                16

General Corporation Law provides that corporations may
indemnify directors and officers "if the person acted in good
faith and in a manner the person reasonably believed to be
in or not opposed to the best interests of the corporation."
8 Del. Code S 145(a). Section 145(b) requires that, if the
director or officer is adjudged liable to the corporation, he
or she will be indemnified "only to the extent that the . . .
court . . . shall determine upon application that, despite the
adjudication of liability but in view of all the circumstances
of the case, such person is fairly and reasonably entitled to
indemnity for such expenses which the . . . court shall
deem proper." Id. S 145(b).

Changes in Delaware’s corporate law make plain that
S 145(b) requires the "adjudication of liability" to be one of
gross, rather than ordinary, negligence.

       Prior to the 1986 amendment to the statute, the
       language relating to the disqualifying adjudication read
       ‘adjudged to be liable for negligence or misconduct in
       the performance of his duty to the corporation.’ Since
       Delaware case law has clearly established ‘gross
       negligence’ as the standard for liability of directors in
       violating their duty of care, the reference to ‘negligence’
_________________________________________________________________

fiduciaries. Still, in the bankruptcy context they may owe a higher level
of care than in ordinary practice. Compare In re Gillett Holdings, 137
B.R. 452, 458 (Bankr. D. Colo. 1991) ("Investment bankers and financial
advisors hired by the Debtor are also fiduciaries."), and In re Allegheny
Int’l, Inc., 100 B.R. 244, 246 (Bankr. W.D. Pa. 1989) ("We now hold that
the investment bankers/financial advisors hired by the debtor and the
Creditors’ Committee are also fiduciaries."), with In re Joan and David
Halpern Inc., 248 B.R. at 46 (earlier cases rejecting indemnification
"overlook the common law principles permitting indemnity of fiduciaries,
and the idea that a fiduciary cannot be indemnified for negligence, or
that such indemnification is contrary to public policy, is just plain
wrong"), In re Mortgage & Realty Trust, 123 B.R. 626, 631 (Bankr. C.D.
Cal. 1991) (rejecting indemnification because it is inconsistent with
"professionalism," but not holding financial advisors to be fiduciaries),
and In re Drexel Burnham Lambert Group, 133 B.R. 13, 27 (Bankr.
S.D.N.Y. 1991) (same). The upshot for this case is that, to the extent that
fiduciaries may obtain indemnity for their negligence, financial advisors
in bankruptcy (who may or may not be fiduciaries) may do the same.

                                17

       in section 145(b) was inappropriate [and was therefore
       removed].

E. Norman Veasey et al., Delaware Supports Directors with
a Three-Legged Stool of Limited Liability, Indemnification,
and Insurance, 42 Bus. Law. 399, 405 (1987); see also
Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., 634 A.2d 345, 364 n.31
(Del. 1993); Smith v. Van Gorkom, 488 A.2d 858, 873 (Del.
1985) (applying a gross negligence standard). In other
words, the most that Delaware law requires of directors,
though they are fiduciaries, is that they not be grossly
negligent. 1 David A. Drexler et al., Delaware Corporation
Law and Practice S 15.06[1], at 15-35 (2001) (citing Brehm
v. Eisner, 746 A.2d 244, 262 (Del. 2000), and Aronson v.
Lewis, 473 A.2d 805, 812 (Del. 1984)). Put another way,
Delaware courts tolerate ordinary negligence from corporate
fiduciaries. It is important, however, to understand how
these terms are understood in this particular context.
Courts are increasingly recognizing the awkwardness
inherent in using the terms "negligence" and"gross
negligence" in the area of corporate governance. The art of
governing (it is emphatically not a science) is replete with
judgment calls and "bet the company" decisions that in
retrospect may seem visionary or deranged, depending on
the outcome. Corporate directors do not choose between
reasonable (non-negligent) and unreasonable (negligent)
alternatives, but rather face a range of options, each with
its attendant mix of risk and reward. Too coarse a filter, the
traditional negligence construct does not allow these
nuances to emerge.

       While it is often stated that corporate directors and
       officers will be liable for negligence in carrying out their
       corporate duties, all seem agreed that such a
       statement is misleading. Whereas an automobile driver
       who makes a mistake in judgment as to speed or
       distance injuring a pedestrian will likely be called upon
       to respond in damages, a corporate officer who makes
       a mistake in judgment as to economic conditions,
       consumer tastes or production line efficiency will
       rarely, if ever, be found liable for damages suffered by
       the corporation.

                                18

Joy v. North, 692 F.2d 880, 885 (2d Cir. 1982) (Winter, J.)
(citations omitted).

In simple terms, "[t]he vocabulary of negligence[,] while
often employed . . . [,] is not well-suited to judicial review
of board attentiveness." In re Caremark Int’l Inc. Derivative
Litig., 698 A.2d 959, 967 n.16 (Del. Ch. 1996) (Allen, C.)
(citation omitted). The same principle applies to financial
advisors. In situations where choices are not clear, neither
are gradations of negligence as a means of analysis.

In the last two decades this confusion about what
negligence means led to uncertainty about liability exposure
for both corporate directors and financial advisors. A
"crisis" in corporate governance arose when Delaware
courts began to hold directors personally liable for their
negligence, and directors were unable to find insurance
against the risks associated with their jobs. See 1 Drexler,
supra, S 15.06[1], at 15-36. As already noted, in the
bankruptcy context the In re Merry-Go-Round settlement of
a suit against an accounting firm advising the estate was a
similarly seismic event for financial advisors. Houlihan
Lokey and other financial advisors fear increases in liability
exposure for the risks associated with doing their jobs.15

Delaware courts have resolved the negligence conundrum
in the corporate sphere by evaluating the process by which
boards reach decisions, rather than the final result of those
decisions. A board’s failure to inform itself of"all material
information reasonably available" results in a finding of
gross negligence. Aronson, 473 A.2d at 812. 16 In fact,
Delaware’s jurisprudence is a direct response to the type of
concerns about second-guessing that Houlihan Lokey
voices:
_________________________________________________________________

15. In this respect Houlihan Lokey’s position is similar to that of creditor
committee members. See 7 Lawrence P. King, Collier on Bankruptcy
P1103.05[4], at 1103-32-33 (15th ed. rev. 1996) ("If members of the
committee can be sued by persons unhappy with the committee’s
performance during the case or unhappy with the outcome of the case,
it will be extremely difficult to find members to serve on an official
committee.").

16. In Merry-Go-Round, claims regarding such a failure by the accounting
firm were at issue.

                                19

       [C]ompliance with a director’s duty of care can never
       appropriately be judicially determined by reference to
       the content of the board decision that leads to a
       corporate loss, apart from consideration of the good
       faith or rationality of the process employed. That is,
       whether a judge or jury [,] considering the matter after
       the fact, believes a decision substantively wrong, or
       degrees of wrong extending through "stupid" to
       "egregious" or "irrational", provides no ground for
       director liability, so long as the court determines that
       the process employed was either rational or employed
       in a good faith effort to advance corporate interests. To
       employ a different rule--one that permitted an
       "objective" evaluation of the decision--would expose
       directors to substantive second guessing by ill-
       equipped judges or juries, which would, in the long-
       run, be injurious to investor interests.

Caremark, 698 A.2d at 967 (emphases in original).

When Houlihan Lokey agreed to advise the Debtors, it
took on the role of a professional (indeed, one highly
respected for its adept counsel in the high-stakes arena of
major restructurings). Its job was to advise the Debtors
well, and it owed them a duty of care in fulfilling this
obligation. To disappoint the reasonable expectations of the
Debtors, their creditors, and indeed the Court, is
unacceptable. At the same time, Houlihan Lokey
convincingly describes the stifling effects of unduly close
scrutiny by the courts. A rule of reason must prevail.

Delaware has navigated the Scylla of condoning directors’
misconduct and the Charybdis of stifling their business
decisions with a rule that stresses not the end result, but
the path taken to reach it. Under this approach, courts do
not interfere with advice by financial advisors when they (1)
have no personal interest,17 (2) have a reasonable
awareness of available information after prudent
_________________________________________________________________

17. The Bankruptcy Code itself requires that professionals working for
the estate be disinterested persons, a term defined in 11 U.S.C.
S 101(14). See also 11 U.S.C. S 327(a) ("[T]he trustee . . . may employ . . .
persons[ ] that do not hold or represent an interest adverse to the estate,
and that are disinterested persons . . . ."); id. S 328(c) (the court may
deny compensation if during employment the professional "is not a
disinterested person, or represents or holds an interest adverse to the
interest of the estate"). While we leave for another day whether, for
example, a financial advisor trading in claims with respect to a debtor it
serves is disinterested, we note that such a circumstance is not rare.

                                20

consideration of alternative options, and (3) provide that
advice in good faith. See 1 Drexler, supra, S 15.03, at 15-6.
In the corporate sphere this is known as the "business
judgment rule." A creature of common law, McMullen v.
Beran, 765 A.2d 910, 916 (Del. 2000), it acknowledges a
judicial syllogism derived from five fundamental tenets:

       (1) the management of a corporation’s affairs is placed
       by law in the hands of its board of directors;

       (2) performance of the directors’ management function
       consists of: (a) decision-making -- i.e., the making
       of economic choices and the weighing of the
       potential of risk against the potential of reward,
       and (b) supervision of officers and employees --
       i.e., attentiveness to corporate affairs;

       (3) corporate directors are not guarantors of the
       financial success of their management efforts;

       (4) though not guarantors, directors as fiduciaries
       should be held legally accountable to the
       corporation and its stockholders when their
       performance falls short of meeting appropriate
       standards; and

       (5) such culpability occurs when directors breach
       their fiduciary duty -- that is, when they profit
       improperly from their positions (i.e., breach the
       "duty of loyalty") or fail to supervise corporate
       affairs with the appropriate level of skill (i.e.,
       breach the "duty of care").

1 Drexler, supra, S 15.03, at 15-6.

Here, where a debtor’s financial affairs -- the pith of a
reorganization -- are shaped by its financial advisors, they
lay out the economic choices and assess their risks, and
(though not sureties of success) can be held accountable for
not advising with the level of care or loyalty expected,
transposing the business judgment rule from its corporate
ambit to bankruptcy appears well suited. For by this
transposition we have a means to distinguish gross from
simple negligence, and thus a benchmark for approving as

                                21
reasonable an arrangement for indemnity that includes
common negligence.18

Our understanding of the developing standards used in
this area fortifies our view that the District Court did not
abuse its discretion by finding the contested terms in the
agreement at issue here to be reasonable. At this initial
stage of the indemnity process (considering and approving
a retention arrangement containing an agreement to
indemnify for ordinary negligence), no evidence before the
District Court tended to disqualify Houlihan Lokey under
the tenets we set out for determining reasonableness of the
indemnity proposed.19

We reach this result with two caveats. The first is that
Houlihan Lokey attempted to supplement its retention
agreement with a provision in the retention application and
approving order that in effect mandates indemnification to
Houlihan Lokey for even its gross negligence if that
negligence is not judicially determined to be "solely" the
_________________________________________________________________

18. Houlihan Lokey argues that our approach nonetheless subjects it to
claims that it has not followed a correct process in advising debtors.
While financial advisors are not Garibaldi for all reorganizations, they are
trained to enhance their prospects. Undertaking this duty for so high a
recompense ($150,000 per month plus a "transaction fee" of 70 basis
points of United Artists’ debt) is hardly reasonable if that training is not
applied.

19. Before the Court was the affidavit of Michael A. Kramer (Managing
Director of Houlihan Lokey), submitted in support of the Debtors’
application to retain Houlihan Lokey, and stating that it was
"disinterested" (and thus had no personal interest in the United Artists
cases), a claim that the U.S. Trustee did not dispute. There was no
allegation that Houlihan Lokey imprudently considered financial options
available to the Debtors, nor was there any allegation of Houlihan
Lokey’s bad faith.

In any event, section 328(a) itself provides a safe harbor for the Court
to reconsider its approval of any employment terms for professionals.

       Notwithstanding such terms and conditions, the court may allow
       compensation different from the compensation provided under such
       terms and conditions after the conclusion of such employment, if
       such terms and conditions prove to have been improvident in light
       of developments not capable of being anticipated at the time of the
       fixing of such terms and conditions.

                                22

cause of its damages. In other words, the Debtors would be
bound to indemnify Houlihan Lokey when its gross
negligence contributed only in part to its damages. This
attempted end run goes out of bounds for acceptable public
policy. See Gwynne, supra, at 730-01 & nn.106-07.

Secondly, as note 8 supra and the accompanying text
indicate, Houlihan Lokey in the Plan sought indemnity only
for actions in its professional capacity. The retention
agreement arguably goes further, for it requires
indemnification of Houlihan Lokey for contractual disputes
with the Debtors. To the extent that Houlihan Lokey seeks
indemnity for a contractual dispute in which the Debtors
allege the breach of Houlihan Lokey’s contractual
obligations,20 this is hardly an indemnity-eligible activity.
See Cochran v. Stifel Fin. Corp., No. Civ. A. 17350, 2000 WL
1847676, at *7 (Del. Ch. Dec. 13, 2000), aff ’d in relevant
part, rev’d in part on other grounds, 809 A.2d 555 (Del.
2002); cf. Gwynne, supra, at 731. 21

* * * * *

Financial advisors are an essential part of
reorganizations. Our decision today recognizes the need for
safeguards from the second-guessing of creditors and,
ultimately, the courts. At the same time, it assigns courts
their accustomed task of evaluating the process by which
advice is given. If financial advisors take the appropriate
steps to arrive at a result, the substance of that result
_________________________________________________________________

20. We doubt that this kind of enhanced indemnity was contemplated by
Houlihan Lokey. Subparagraph (a)(iv) of Exhibit A to the retention
agreement speaks only of the breach by the Debtors of their contractual
covenants, representations, and warranties. While subparagraph (a)(i)
relates to any dispute involving the agreement (which theoretically may
involve breaches by Houlihan Lokey of its obligations), it appears that
such a conceivable argument is overridden by subparagraph (d), which
exempts from indemnity "gross negligence, ... willful misfeasance, or
reckless disregard [by Houlihan Lokey] of its obligations or duties" under
the agreement.

21. As noted supra n.4, the U.S. Trustee has not appealed whether the
order permitting indemnification of Houlihan Lokey for its prepetition
performance of services to the Debtors is reasonable under S 328(a). We
therefore do not address this question.

                                23

should not be questioned. So understood, agreements to
indemnify financial advisors for their negligence are
reasonable under S 328(a) of the Bankruptcy Code.22

IV. Conclusion

       The U.S. Trustee has standing to bring this case. His
claim is not constitutionally moot because Plan
confirmation has not released all potential claims against
Houlihan Lokey. It is not equitably moot because the relief
requested will not upset the confirmed Plan. Because it is
permissible for financial advisors to obtain indemnity for
negligent acts if understood in the context noted above, the
contested provision is acceptable. We therefore affirm.
_________________________________________________________________

22. Our concurring colleague has taken a more familiar path to the
same result. That path is plausible and merits consideration. We go
another way because the traditional approach sheds no light on when
negligence becomes gross, and thus not indemnifiable. With great
conviction, however, we disavow the attempt to blot our judicial
escutcheon with the claim that we engage in "policy making" that "goes
far beyond the parameters of our judicial function." We address directly
the issue on appeal, see supra n.4, and in deciding that issue explain
when it is "reasonable" under S 328(a) of the Bankruptcy Code to
approve an agreement to indemnify a financial advisor for its own
negligence by laying down markers to discern what simple negligence is
and is not. As our colleague points out, "the law is unsettled and our
bankruptcy and district courts need guidance."

                                24

ALITO, Circuit Judge, Concurring:

I fully join the thoughtful and scholarly opinion of the
court but add a few words in response to Judge Rendell’s
concurring opinion. With respect, I believe that Judge
Rendell’s opinion quarrels with an opinion other than the
one that the court has issued. The opinion of the court, as
I understand it, holds only that the "reasonableness"
standard of 11 U.S.C. S 328(a) does not categorically
prohibit indemnification of financial advisers, as the United
States Trustee argues. If such a blanket prohibition is
desirable, it should be enacted by Congress.

Contrary to the suggestion in Judge Rendell’s
concurrence, the court does not hold that Houlihan Lokey’s
indemnification agreement must be interpreted in
accordance with the principles of Delaware corporate law
that the opinion of the court discusses. Nor does the court
issue an authoritative interpretation of that agreement.
Rather, the court discusses principles of Delaware
corporate law because they provide a sophisticated
framework for evaluating the conduct of financial advisers
and because this understanding of the circumstances in
which in it sensible to hold financial advisers responsible
for unsuccessful business decisions helps to explain why
indemnification agreements such as the one in this case
are not categorically "unreasonable."

                                25

RENDELL, Circuit Judge, Concurring:

I agree with the result reached by the District Court and
agree that we should affirm its order. However, I
respectfully reject the majority’s ruling on the merits, as I
read Judge Ambro’s opinion, because it represents a
significant departure, if not a quantum leap, from the issue
before us.

Writing for the panel, brother Ambro does not address
what the District Court did or the arguments raised by the
parties on this unresolved yet important issue; the opinion
actually ignores the issue presented on appeal. The Trustee
seeks a per se ban on provisions granting indemnity to
financial advisors for negligence. Houlihan Lokey takes the
position that such provisions should be permissible and
that the court should examine them on a case-by-case
basis. The parties briefed the various aspects of that issue,
including the propriety of professionals’ obtaining such
indemnity and whether it was appropriate or necessary in
the given setting. While, as the District Court noted, there
is no binding caselaw, there are numerous cases that
express differing views on the issue.1
_________________________________________________________________

1. In rejecting a per se ban on indemnity provisions, the District Court
focused on the "reasonableness" language in section 328(a) and
conducted an independent analysis of this agreement. A number of other
courts favor this approach and have used it to uphold some indemnity
provisions and reject others. For example, the District Court for the
Northern District of Illinois and the Bankruptcy Court for the Southern
District of New York have both upheld similar indemnity provisions,
rejecting the Trustee’s argument that such provisions should be per se
unreasonable. In re Comdisco, Inc., Nos. 02 C 1174 & 02 C 1397
(consolidated), 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17994, at *16 (N.D. Ill. Sept. 25,
2002); In re Joan & David Halpern, Inc., 248 B.R. 43, 47 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y
2000). Houlihan Lokey cites to numerous non precedential decisions of
the Bankruptcy Courts for the District of Delaware doing the same. A’ee
Br. at 22. Bankruptcy Courts in California and Colorado have also
subjected indemnity provision to a full reasonableness inquiry. See, e.g.,
In re Metricom, Inc., 275 B.R. 364, 371 (Bankr. N.D. Cal. 2002) (stating
that "the issue is whether particular terms are reasonable under given
circumstances, and such a determination can only be made on a case by
case basis") (ultimately rejecting provision at issue); In re Gillett Holdings,
Inc., 137 B.R. 452, 458-49 (Bankr. D. Colo. 1991) ("This Court will not

                                26

Instead of addressing these arguments, Judge Ambro’s
opinion ventures into the arena of corporate law and
fashions an open-ended good faith business judgment rule,
based upon Delaware corporate law principles, as the test
for the "reasonableness" of advisors’ indemnity. It does so
because it finds the concepts of negligence and gross
negligence to be too results-oriented.

I do not doubt that scholars and professors -- and indeed
some practitioners -- may have an aversion to distinctions
made between negligence and gross negligence and have
therefore suggested that corporate directors should not be
liable if they follow the appropriate process and exercise
their business judgment. However, that is not the issue
_________________________________________________________________

go so far as to hold that indemnity provisions per se are either
unacceptable or unnecessary in these circumstances. Indemnity
provisions must be analyzed on a case-by-case basis.") (citation omitted)
(ultimately rejecting provision at issue); In re Mortgage & Realty Trust,
123 B.R. 626, 630 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 1991) (rejecting provision at issue
because debtor had presented no evidence of its reasonableness).

In support of her theory that indemnity provisions should be banned
outright, the Trustee relies on an opinion from one of our own
bankruptcy courts, In re Allegheny International, Inc., 100 B.R. 244, 247
(Bankr. W.D. Pa. 1989). In Allegheny, Judge Cosetti decided that
financial advisors were fiduciaries of the debtors who hired them. Id. at
246. He went on to appropriate Judge Cardozo’s famous remarks in
Meinhard v. Salmon, 164 N.E. 545, 546 (N.Y. 1928), for the proposition
that fiduciaries owe the highest standard of care, and to conclude that
"holding a fiduciary harmless for its own negligence is shockingly
inconsistent with the strict standard of conduct for fiduciaries."
Allegheny, 100 B.R. at 247. Courts faced with this issue have referenced
the "fiduciary" language, but have generally looked at an advisor’s
fiduciary status as one factor in a reasonableness analysis, not as
support for a per se ban on indemnity. See, e.g., Gillett, 137 B.R. at 458;
Mortgage & Realty Trust, 123 B.R. at 630.

Here, the parties have not argued that professionals like Houlihan are
fiduciaries as such, and I suggest that resort to nomenclature for
resolution of the issues before us would be wrong. The issue here is
"reasonableness" under section 328(a). An agreement about what status
might be attributed to professionals based on analogous corporate trust
principles should give way to a consideration of what is reasonable
under all of the circumstances in the bankruptcy context.

                                27

before us, nor is it a concept that either of the parties has
even remotely embraced.

Responding to a line of inquiry at oral argument, the
Trustee and Houlihan Lokey filed supplemental briefs
specifically addressing the propriety of our creating a new
"reasonableness" standard separate and apart from the
negligence principles embodied in their agreement. They
specifically requested that we not do so. 2 As both parties
have noted, we should decide the issue presented to us, not
craft new rules or address matters beyond the scope of the
appeal. I should note that I would favor Judge Alito’s
reading of Judge Ambro’s opinion, but fear it will not be so
read.

I cannot help but wonder why we should resort to
reasoning that "eschews the inherent imprecision between
shades of negligence" when the parties bargained under
traditional negligence principles and rules. And why should
we concern ourselves with Delaware law applicable to
directors, when the retention agreement here was
_________________________________________________________________

2. In their Supplemental Briefs, the Trustee and Houlihan Lokey both
pointed out the dangers inherent in our creating a new standard in this
case. First and foremost, both parties noted that our appellate
jurisdiction should be limited to deciding the issue presented, that is,
whether the District Court abused its discretion in approving the
retention agreement. See App. Supp. Br. at 3 ("The crafting of new
negligence standards . . . seems inconsistent with the scope of this
appeal.")

The parties also implored us not to venture into the realm of the
legislature, as we are not equipped to weigh the many complicated
interests that go into bankruptcy administration, nor can we predict the
implications of a new untested standard or the ways it might upset the
current balance of incentives. App. Supp. Br. at 6-7; A’ee Supp. Br. at
6. The Trustee worries that the majority’s test will essentially excuse all
professional misconduct by financial advisors, while for its part,
Houlihan Lokey fears the rigid test will undermine its own safeguards,
exposing it to "process" litigation by creditors unhappy with their
recovery, even where there was no basis on which to attack the
substantive advice actually given. App. Supp. Br. at 9; A’ee Supp. Br. at
5. In short, neither party revealed any inclination to support what the
majority has done. Rather, both vehemently argued against this
approach.

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specifically governed by New York law and was meant to
govern a relationship not with directors, but between a
company and its professional financial advisors? 3 Financial
advisors are not directors, and I do not find their status to
be analogous.

I must confess that although I would acknowledge that
my colleagues sincerely believe that their view represents a
contribution to our thinking about the issue at hand, I find
it very difficult to conceive of the application, and
implications, of this new test. Presumably, the first and
third prongs -- "disinterested" and "good faith" -- are easily
met, but what does the second prong mean? When does a
financial advisor not have "a reasonable awareness of
available information after prudent consideration of
alternative options"?

In a footnote, Judge Ambro seemingly applies the post-
hoc test he espouses (n.19), concluding that the evidence
before the District Court revealed no personal interest on
the part of Houlihan Lokey in the United Artists cases, and
that, because there were no allegations of imprudent
consideration by Houlihan Lokey of the available financial
options or of bad faith, Houlihan Lokey is entitled to
indemnity. Even were I to agree that the creation of a new
test is warranted, surely this is not the way to apply it. This
conclusory treatment leaves us uncertain as to how the test
should be applied in other instances. I cannot tell whether
it will provide a blank check for substandard performance
(as the Trustee urges), or will foment process-oriented
litigation (as Houlihan Lokey submits). Further, I cannot
imagine what guidance we are giving to the District Court
by changing the rules midstream, much less what
implications this poses for indemnity agreements already in
force.

The rationale for adopting this test -- namely, an
aversion to a "results-oriented" approach to liability, and
therefore, indemnity -- goes far beyond the parameters of
_________________________________________________________________

3. Although United Artists is a Delaware corporation, its retention
agreement with Houlihan Lokey contains an explicit choice of law
provision specifying New York law as the governing state law. App. at
132-33.
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our judicial function, into the sphere of policy making. To
my mind, the adoption of a business judgment rule as
providing a standard for indemnification of professional
advisors is fraught with policy considerations, none of
which has been explored in this case. These are the types
of concerns that should be considered in the first instance
by a legislative, rather than a judicial, body. Further, the
test can only be applied after the fact, thus essentially
emasculating the bankruptcy courts’ testing of terms of
retention at the time of retention, as is clearly envisioned by
section 328(a). I fear that our grafting such a test onto
section 328(a) goes beyond our ken, especially here where
we are reviewing a determination by the District Court that
followed traditional lines of reasoning.

The issue actually before us, as framed by the parties
and decided by the District Court, deserves our attention.
Is there something essentially problematic with the concept
of professionals bargaining for indemnity against their own
negligence? Should it ever be permitted? If so, under what
circumstances? We should address the issue as presented,
because the law is unsettled and our bankruptcy and
district courts need guidance.

The District Court considered the merits of this issue
very seriously and thoroughly, entertaining briefing and
oral argument that spans nearly 500 pages of the
voluminous appendix submitted on appeal. Instead of
creating a new test, I would affirm by disavowing the notion
of a per se ban, engaging in a discussion of the factors that
the courts have examined in considering "reasonableness"
on a case by case basis under section 328, and approving
the ultimate result reached by the District Court based on
the extensive record presented.4
_________________________________________________________________

4. Among the specified factors, and facts, weighing in favor of the
reasonableness of this agreement in the situation presented here are:
1) the retention of Houlihan Lokey was in the best interest of the estate,
as it played a crucial role in the restructuring; 2) United Artists’
creditors approved the agreement and have never objected to the
indemnity provision; 3) the agreement did not prov ide blanket immunity,
but rather contained detailed procedures for determining at a later date
whether a particular application for indemnity should be granted;

                                30

The review and assessment of the law and the record--
rather than the creation of a slippery slope for testing
consulting professionals’ liability in the bankruptcy arena
-- should be the basis of our rule. The concluding
paragraphs of the opinion seem to venture into an analysis
of "reasonableness," noting two aspects of the indemnity
agreement that are, respectively, an "end run" around
"acceptable public policy" (the indemnity for gross
negligence when that negligence is not solely the cause of
damages), and not an "indemnity-eligible activity" (the
indemnity for contractual disputes with Debtors). These
aspects were never argued or briefed, but I suggest that it
is this type of scrutiny of the provisions of the retention
agreement that is called for under the "reasonableness"
standard of section 328(a). I agree that, assessed under the
"reasonableness" standard, these two terms do not pass
muster. But, unfortunately, we are left confused as to
whether the overall inquiry is, as urged in the thrust of the
opinion, a post hoc examination, or whether some scrutiny
-- on some reasonableness basis -- is to be undertaken at
the outset. It is hard to imagine that reasoning done at the
outset, if it does occur, could be anything other than a
complete and binding determination of "reasonableness,"
making some after the fact business judgment rule
_________________________________________________________________

4) Houlihan Lokey had been retained pre-petition u nder an agreement
containing an indemnity clause. Most of its work was performed prior to
the initiation of bankruptcy proceedings, so, relatively speaking, its post-
bankruptcy indemnity was not particularly significant; 5) United Artists
and Houlihan Lokey are sophisticated business entities with equal
bargaining power who engaged in an arms length negotiation; 6) such
terms are viewed as normal business terms in the marketplace, see In re
Busy Beaver Bldg. Centers, 19 F.3d 833, 849 (3d Cir. 1994) (condoning
a "market-driven" approach to reasonableness); and finally, 7) under the
terms of section 328, the District Court retained discretion to modify the
agreement "if such terms and conditions prove to have been
improvident." 11 U.S.C. S 328(a). Indeed, we have encouraged similar
exercises of discretion in the realm of post-bankruptcy fees for attorney
services to debtors under 11 U.S.C. S 330. In re Top Grade Sausage, Inc.,
227 F.3d 123, 132-33 (3d Cir. 2000). I would therefore approve the
indemnity agreement, subject to the two caveats noted by the majority,
as discussed in the penultimate paragraph of this concurrence.

                                31

unnecessary and uncalled for. Once again, we are left
questioning how to apply this test.

Therefore, although I concur in the resulting affirmance,
I would arrive at that result via an entirely different route.

A True Copy:
Teste:

       Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals
       for the Third Circuit

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