Court Opinion

ID: 4549472
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-07-20 15:00:17.895203+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:00:29.415914
License: Public Domain

19-1725
In Re: 21st Century Oncology Holdings, Inc.

                          United States Court of Appeals
                              for the Second Circuit

                                 AUGUST TERM 2019
                                   No. 19-1725

    In Re: 21st Century Oncology Holdings, Inc., AKA Radiation Therapy Services
                                  Holdings, Inc.,
                               Reorganized Debtor.

                          ************************************

                                ANDREW L. WOODS,
                                   Appellant,

                                          v.

                   21ST CENTURY ONCOLOGY HOLDINGS, INC.,
                AKA RADIATION THERAPY SERVICES HOLDINGS, INC.,
                        Reorganized Debtor-Appellee. *

                             ARGUED: MARCH 25, 2020
                              DECIDED: JULY 20, 2020

Before:       JACOBS, POOLER, and CARNEY, Circuit Judges.

*The Clerk of the Court is respectfully directed to amend the official caption to
conform to the above.

                                           1
      Andrew L. Woods appeals from a bankruptcy court order capping his

claim for certain incentive payments promised by his former employer pursuant

to 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(7), which limits employee claims for damages “resulting

from the termination of an employment contract.”     Because Woods’ right to

receive the payments was accelerated as a result of his termination, we hold that

§ 502(b)(7) applied to his claim, and therefore affirm the judgment of the

bankruptcy court.

      Affirmed.

                              ____________________

                         LEON N. PATRICIOS, Zumpano Patricios, P.A., Coral
                         Gables, FL, (John E. Jureller, Jr., Klestadt Winters
                         Jureller Southard & Stevens, LLP, on the brief) for
                         Appellant Andrew L. Woods.

                         JEFFREY R. GLEIT, Sullivan & Worcester LLP, New
                         York, NY, for Appellee 21st Century Oncology
                         Holdings, Inc., AKA Radiation Therapy Services
                         Holdings, Inc.

DENNIS JACOBS, Circuit Judge:

                                        2
      Andrew L. Wood, a lobbyist with appellee 21st Century Oncology

Associates, Inc. (“21C”) until his termination, appeals from the Decision and

Order of the District Court for the Southern District of New York (McMahon, CJ.)

affirming the judgment of the Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New

York (Drain, J.), which reduced Woods’ allowed claim for certain deferred

incentive bonus payments pursuant to section 502(b)(7) of chapter 11 of the U.S.

Code (the “Bankruptcy Code”).     That subsection limits claims for damages

“resulting from termination of an employment contract” to the sum of: (1) a

single year of compensation “without acceleration”; and (2) unpaid

compensation “due . . . without acceleration” on the date of termination.

11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(7)(A)-(B).

      At the time of termination, certain lobbying objectives specified in Woods’

employment contract had been achieved, triggering provisions that promised

him $10 million in incentive bonuses.   Under the contract, the bonus payments

were payable over a period of five years, but became due in full when and

because Woods was fired without cause.      On appeal, Woods contends that §

502(b)(7) applies only to forward-looking claims in the nature of severance--not

                                        3
to claims for compensation on account of services already performed--and draws

the analogy to pensions, which courts have declined to cap.    Woods argues that

because his rights to receive the incentive bonuses were fully vested prior to his

termination, the timing of the bonus payments was irrelevant to the application

of § 502(b)(7). We affirm because, pursuant to Woods’ contract, portions of the

incentive bonuses were not in fact due prior to termination, but were accelerated

as the contract expressly provides. Accordingly, the plain language of

§ 502(b)(7) requires that we apply its cap to Woods’ claim for accelerated

payments.

                                    BACKGROUND

                                             I

      21C, a provider of radiation therapy to cancer patients, employed Woods

from approximately 2010 to September 23, 2016.     The Amended and Restated

Executive Employment Agreement dated May 13, 2013 (the “Employment

Agreement”) assigned Woods to promote legislative and administrative

initiatives that would enhance 21C’s profitability by increasing Medicare

                                         4
reimbursements to freestanding radiation therapy clinics.      In addition to various

other forms of compensation, including a $1 million annual salary and health

benefits, Woods was promised incentive bonus payments totaling $10 million

(the “Incentive Bonuses”) if the desired reforms were adopted--which they were.

      Specifically, Section 3(b) of the Employment Agreement, titled “Executive

Compensation,” provides as follows:

            Performance Incentive and Other Bonuses. The Executive shall be
            entitled to receive the following incentive bonuses:

            (i) Five Million Dollars ($5,000,000) from the Company for
            achievement during the Term of a freeze on reductions in Medicare
            reimbursement to freestanding radiation therapy centers except for
            those reductions negotiated on behalf of the Company,

            (ii) Two Million Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($2,500,000) from
            the Company for achievement during the Term of adoption of a
            new, multi-bundled payment system for freestanding radiation
            therapy centers, to which the Company elects not to participate,

            (iii) Two Million Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($2,500,000) upon
            the Company’s initial election to participate in any way in the
            system referred to in clause (ii) above, and

            (iv) other cash bonuses as agreed to in writing in the future . . . .

Employment Agreement § 3(b).

                                         5
      The Incentive Bonuses were payable in annual installments. Woods

would receive the payments over a five-year period of continued employment

except under certain circumstances--including Woods’ termination without

cause--in which case he would receive an “accelerated” lump sum:

            Payments under clauses (i) through (iii) above shall be made
            annually over a five year period, with the first payment payable within
            five (5) business days following the freeze, adoption or election,
            respectively. Any deferred payments of incentive bonuses shall be
            immediately accelerated and paid in full in the event of (A) the Executive’s
            termination without Cause, termination by the Executive for Good
            Reason or as a result of the Executive’s death or Disability or (B)
            upon a “Change of Control” . . . , a “Sale of the Company” . . . , or a
            “Public Offering” . . . .
Id. (emphasis added). Under the contract, if Woods were terminated without

cause he would receive, in addition to an accelerated Incentive Bonus payment,

24 monthly “Severance Payments” totaling one year’s base salary of $1 million as

well as continued health insurance.     Employment Agreement § 5(b).

Conversely, Woods would forfeit any unpaid Incentive Bonuses (as well as the

Severance Payments and health insurance coverage) if he resigned without good

reason or were terminated for cause.     See Employment Agreement § 5(d)-(e)

(providing that under these circumstances Woods “shall only be entitled to the

                                          6
Accrued Compensation”); id. §§ 5(b), 6 (distinguishing Accrued Compensation

from “deferred payments of performance incentive bonuses pursuant to Section

3(b)”).

      During Woods’ tenure at 21C, the federal government made the changes to

Medicare reimbursement rates and procedures that 21C had sought: on

December 28, 2015, Congress froze reductions in Medicare reimbursement for

freestanding radiation therapy centers like 21C’s; and on June 29, 2016, the

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services introduced a multi-bundled

payment system for cancer care services, in which 21C elected to participate.    As

a result, Woods received an initial Incentive Bonus payment of $1 million,

leaving $9 million in bonuses yet to be paid.

      On September 23, 2016, 21C terminated Woods without cause.1        When

21C refused Woods’ request for immediate payment of $9 million in additional

Incentive Bonuses, Woods filed suit.   On May 25, 2017, 21C and its affiliates

1 21C initially took the position that Woods was terminated for cause, but now
concedes that the firing was without cause. See Appellee’s Br. at 6.

                                        7
filed chapter 11 cases for bankruptcy protection in the Bankruptcy Court for the

Southern District of New York (the “Chapter 11 Cases”).

                                              II

      Woods filed a claim in the Chapter 11 Cases seeking, among other things,

$9 million in unpaid Incentive Bonuses and $1 million in Severance Payments.

In response, 21C and its affiliated debtors (collectively, the “Debtors”) filed a

limited objection. In relevant part, the Debtors argued that the portion of

Woods’ claim attributable to deferred Incentive Bonuses should be reduced

pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(7), which caps at one year’s compensation “the

claim of an employee for damages resulting from the termination of an

employment contract.”

      The bankruptcy court ruled that the Incentive Bonuses were subject to the

cap under § 502(b)(7).   In re 21st Century Oncology Holdings, Inc., 597 B.R. 217,

234 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2019), aff’d, No. 19 CIV. 1102 (CM), 2019 WL 2498264

(S.D.N.Y. June 3, 2019). The court reasoned that the Incentive Bonuses did not

“vest” when the Medicare reforms specified in § 3(b) of the Employment

Agreement were made; on the contrary (the court went on), the full amount of

                                          8
the Incentive Bonuses became payable only as a result of Woods’ termination.
Id. at 228-29. The court concluded that the plain language of § 502(b)(7) capped

the deferred Incentive Bonuses because they were not in fact due “without

acceleration” prior to Woods’ termination. Id. at 228 (quoting 11 U.S.C.

§ 502(b)(7)(B)).

      On February 1, 2019, the bankruptcy court entered a final order capping

Woods’ Incentive Bonus claim at $4 million.    Pursuant to § 502(b)(7)(A)-(B), that

figure included unpaid Incentive Bonuses that were due and payable as of

Woods’ termination, as well as the bonuses that would have come due in the

one-year period following his termination had he remained employed.2          The

bankruptcy court’s order was affirmed by the District Court for the Southern

2 In the bankruptcy court, the Debtors argued that Woods’ claim should be
reduced to reflect that the two $2.5 million bonuses described in §§ 3(b)(ii) and
3(b)(iii) of the Employment Agreement were mutually exclusive. In re 21st
Century Oncology Holdings, Inc., 597 B.R. at 233-34. The bankruptcy court
ruled that the Employment Agreement was ambiguous on this point, and
ordered discovery to elicit parol evidence. Id. at 234. However, to avoid the
cost of further litigation, the Debtors withdrew their objection to Woods’ claim
for Incentive Bonuses under § 3(b)(iii) of the Employment Agreement. See
Appellee’s Br. at 8.

                                         9
District of New York (McMahon, CJ.), and on June 10, 2019, Woods entered a

timely notice of appeal.

                                    DISCUSSION

                                          I

         We review de novo the bankruptcy court’s legal conclusions concerning

the interpretation of § 502(b)(7) and its application to Woods’ Employment

Agreement.      See In re N. New England Tel. Operations LLC, 795 F.3d 343, 346

(2d Cir. 2015) (explaining that this Court “independently review[s]” the legal

conclusions of a bankruptcy court de novo notwithstanding the intermediate

review of the district court).   21C has accepted Woods’ factual allegations as

true for purposes of this appeal.

      Section 502(b)(7) of the Bankruptcy Code provides that if a party objects to

the claim of an employee of the debtor, the bankruptcy court shall allow the

claim except:

             if such claim is . . . for damages resulting from the termination of an
             employment contract, such claim exceeds—

                                          10
             (A) the compensation provided by such contract, without acceleration,
             for one year following the earlier of—
                   (i) the date of the filing of the petition; or
                   (ii) the date on which the employer directed the employee to
                   terminate, or such employee terminated, performance under
                   such contract; plus

             (B) any unpaid compensation due under such contract, without
             acceleration, on the earlier of such dates.

11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(7) (emphasis added).    In practice, this provision acts a cap on

a terminated employee’s otherwise-valid state law claim for contract damages

arising from termination, limiting the “allowed” amount of such claim to the

sum of: (1) one year’s future compensation under the employment contract; and

(2) any back pay due, without acceleration, on the date of the employee’s

termination. See In re Condor Sys., Inc., 296 B.R. 5, 12 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 2003)

(explaining that § 502(b)(7) “merely establishes a limit on what will be allowed to

be paid from the bankruptcy estate and is . . . [not] a limit on substantive

damages”).

                                               II

      On appeal, Woods argues as follows: § 502(b)(7) is inapplicable to the

deferred Incentive Bonuses because Woods’ right to payment did not “result[]

                                          11
from the termination of an employment contract,” as the statute requires,

Appellant’s Br. at 14; he earned the right to full payment of the Incentive Bonuses

prior to his termination, when the events described in Section 3(b)(i)-(iii) of the

Employment Agreement (the “Triggering Events”) transpired, id. at 17; with the

enactment of the desired Medicare reforms, 21C received all that it had

bargained for, and no further performance was required on his part, id. at 30;

therefore, whether Woods received the payment in installments or in a lump sum

was “irrelevant” to the application of § 502(b)(7), id. at 26.   In sum, Woods

argues that the deferred Incentive Bonuses were “fundamentally different from

severance pay,” since they were “fully vested” prior to his termination--like fully

vested employee retirement benefits, which fall outside the scope of § 502(b)(7).
Id. at 24-25.

       Whatever its intuitive appeal, Woods’ position is incompatible with the

plain language of the Bankruptcy Code.         Section 502(b)(7) typically applies to

the severance claims of senior executives 3; and, as Woods points out, the

3 See In re VeraSun Energy Corp., 467 B.R. 757, 765 (Bankr. D. Del. 2012) (noting
that “[c]ourts considering the policy behind § 502(b)(7) have said that the section
‘was designed to limit the claims of key executives who had been able to

                                          12
Incentive Bonuses differ from severance because they are compensation for

services already performed. However, the text of § 502(b)(7) is not necessarily

limited to snipping the cords on golden parachutes.    See, e.g., In re Dornier

Aviation (N. Am.), Inc., 305 B.R. 650, 651 (E.D. Va. 2004) (applying § 502(b)(7) cap

to employee claims for damages arising from employer’s failure to provide them

with ninety days’ notice prior to termination as required by their employment

agreements); VeraSun, 467 B.R. at 762, 767 (capping employee claims under

contract provisions described as “stay in place” agreements).    In short, a claim

may be subject to the § 502(b)(7) cap whether or not it is characterized as

severance.

      Section 502(b)(7) applies broadly to employee claims for “damages

resulting from the termination of an employment contract,” except to the extent

that the claim is for “unpaid compensation due . . . without acceleration,” on the

date of termination.   11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(7).   The Employment Agreement makes

explicit that the deferred incentive bonuses were not “due . . . without

negotiate contracts with very beneficial terms’”) (quoting In re Protarga Inc., 329
B.R. 451, 465 (Bankr. D. Del. 2005)).

                                         13
acceleration” on September 23, 2016, the date of Woods’ termination.     Absent

termination of the employment contract, Woods would not have received full

payment unless he remained employed with 21C for five years after the

Triggering Events. 4 The Triggering Events were thus necessary but not

sufficient conditions for payment of the deferred Incentive Bonuses. 5   Only

through continued employment--or the termination of the Employment

Agreement under specified circumstances--could Woods obtain the full amount

of the deferred Incentive Bonuses.

      Further, the statute’s explicit provisions for “acceleration” subvert Woods’

contention that the timing of the Incentive Bonus payments was “irrelevant.”

Appellant’s Br. at 26. Twice, § 502(b)(7) excludes from an employee’s allowed

claim any compensation that come due as a result of “acceleration” upon

4 See Employment Agreement § 5(d)-(e) (providing that if Woods resigns
without good reason or is terminated for cause, he “shall only be entitled to the
Accrued Compensation”); id. §§ 5(b), 6 (excluding from Accrued Compensation
“deferred payments of performance incentive bonuses”).

5The Employment Agreement also provided, at § 5(f), that Woods would “forfeit
all rights” to payment of the deferred Incentive Bonuses if he failed to execute a
“general release of claims in favor of [21C]” within 60 days of his termination.

                                        14
termination of the employment contract.       See 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(7)(A), (B)

(limiting employee’s allowed claim to “the compensation provided by [the

employment] contract, without acceleration, for one year following the [date of

termination]” plus “unpaid compensation due under such contract, without

acceleration, on the [date of termination]” (emphasis added)).     Section 3(b) of the

Employment Agreement expressly speaks in terms of acceleration, providing

that “deferred payments of incentive bonuses shall be immediately accelerated

and paid in full in the event of . . . [Woods’] termination without Cause.”

Woods’ position that the acceleration of the Incentive Bonus payments upon

Woods’ termination was “irrelevant” would “effectively erase the phrase

‘without acceleration’ from the statute and impermissibly redraw the line

Congress carefully drew between capped and uncapped contract termination

claims.” Dornier, 305 B.R. at 655.

      Finally, Woods argues that his claim for deferred Incentive Bonuses is

analogous to a claim for vested retirement benefits, which various courts have

concluded fall outside the scope of § 502(b)(7).    See, e.g., In re Prospect Hill Res.,

Inc., 837 F.2d 453, 455 (11th Cir. 1988) (reasoning that § 502(b)(7) “limits claims

                                         15
for future compensation” whereas “[a] retired employee . . . has done his work

and earned his retirement” and “the right to the bargained-for benefit has

vested”). If anything, this comparison highlights the weakness of the assertion

that Woods’ rights to the deferred Incentive Bonuses “vested” prior to his

termination. An employee’s retirement benefits cannot be deemed “vested” if

she would forfeit them by deciding to retire. Yet that is exactly what the

Employment Agreement provided with respect to the deferred Incentive

Bonuses: as discussed above, if Woods were to “voluntarily terminate[] his

employment . . . not for Good Reason,” he would forgo any further deferred

Incentive Bonus payments. Employment Agreement §§ 5(e), (b).            For the same

reason, this case is distinguishable from those instances in which courts have

declined to apply the § 502(b)(7) cap to other “vested” employee entitlements. 6

      As the bankruptcy court explained, we are required to apply the plain

language of § 502(b)(7) absent absurd results.    21st Century Oncology, 597 B.R.
6See In re Irvine-Pac. Commercial Ins. Brokers, Inc., 228 B.R. 245 (B.A.P. 9th Cir.
1998) (employee had fully vested stake in deferred compensation and was
entitled to payment upon resignation); In re Handy Andy Home Improvement
Ctrs., Inc., 1997 WL 401583 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. July 9, 1997) (Illinois statute granted
employee nonforfeitable right to partial payment of incentive bonus).

                                         16
at 228 (citing Lamie v. U.S. Trustee, 540 U.S. 526, 534 (2004)).   Woods’ services

may have benefited 21C; but the imposition of a partial cap on his allowed claim

for deferred Incentive Bonuses is far from absurd.     Applying Congress’s broad

language as written may serve to prevent employers and executives from

evading the § 502(b)(7) cap through artful drafting--recasting a golden parachute

as an incentive payment for goals easily achieved.

                                         ***

      Because the deferred Incentive Bonus payments in dispute were not

“due . . . without acceleration” on the date of Woods’ termination, we hold that

they were properly subject to the § 502(b)(7) cap.    Therefore, the judgment of the

bankruptcy court is AFFIRMED.

                                         17