Court Opinion

ID: 1040539
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-09-12 14:29:01.704034+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:49:46.554400
License: Public Domain

13-1204-cv; 13-1207-cv; 13-1208-cv
In re AMR Corp.,

                   United States Court of Appeals
                            FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT

                                     August Term 2012

            (Argued: June 20, 2013          Decided: September 12, 2013)

                   Docket Nos. 13-1204-cv, 13-1207-cv, 13-1208-cv
                   ____________________________________________

                            IN RE: AMR CORPORATION ET AL.,
                                       Debtors,

U.S. BANK TRUST NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, as Trustee and Security Agent
under the Indenture and Aircraft Security Agreement for American
Airlines 2009-2 Senior Secured Notes Due 2016, as Loan Trustee and Pass
Through Trustee under those certain Indenture and Security Agreements
with respect to the AMR 2009-1 EETC and AMR 2011-2 EETC Transactions,
                                Appellant,

                                           -v.-

                   AMR CORPORATION, AMERICAN AIRLINES, INC.,
                                    Appellees.
                   ____________________________________________

Before: LIVINGSTON, LYNCH, and LOHIER, Circuit Judges.

      U.S. Bank Trust National Association (“U.S. Bank”) appeals from the
decision of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of
New York (Lane, B.J.), authorizing Debtors AMR Corporation and American
Airlines (collectively “Debtors” or “American”) to obtain postpetition secured
financing and to repay existing prepetition debt owed to U.S. Bank, and
denying U.S. Bank’s request for relief from the automatic stay. We granted
U.S. Bank’s petition for authorization of direct appeal under 28 U.S.C.
§ 158(d)(2)(A). On appeal, U.S. Bank argues that American is voluntarily
attempting to repay the debt owed on its Notes and therefore must pay a

                                            1
Make-Whole Amount under the terms of the Indentures and pursuant to its
11 U.S.C. § 1110(a) elections. We disagree and therefore AFFIRM the
bankruptcy court’s order and judgments authorizing American to seek
postpetition financing and to repay outstanding principal and interest (but no
Make-Whole Amount) to U.S. Bank and declining to lift the automatic stay.

                              MICHAEL G. BURKE, Sidley Austin LLP, New
                              York, NY (Nicholas K. Lagemann, Erica S.
                              Malin, Andrew P. Propps, Sidley Austin LLP,
                              New York, NY; Ira H. Goldman, Kathleen M.
                              LaManna, Shipman & Goodwin LLP, Hartford,
                              CT, on the brief) for Appellant U.S. Bank Trust
                              National Association, as Trustee and Security
                              Agent under the Indenture and Aircraft
                              Security Agreement for American Airlines 2009-
                              2 Senior Secured Notes due 2016.

                              FRANKLIN H. TOP, III, Chapman and Cutler
                              LLP, Chicago, IL (Craig M. Price, Laura E.
                              Appleby, Chapman and Cutler LLP, New York,
                              NY; Ira H. Goldman, Kathleen M. LaManna,
                              Shipman & Goodwin LLP, Hartford CT, on the
                              brief) for Appellant U.S. Bank Trust National
                              Association, as Loan Trustee and Pass Through
                              Trustee under those certain Indenture and
                              Security Agreements with respect to the AMR
                              2009-1 EETC and AMR 2011-2 EETC
                              Transactions.

                              MICHAEL E. WILES, Debevoise & Plimpton LLP,
                              New York, NY (Erica S. Weisgerber, Debevoise
                              & Plimpton LLP, New York, NY; Stephen
                              Karotkin, Alfredo R. Pérez, Weil, Gotshal &
                              Manges LLP, New York, NY, on the brief) for
                              Appellees.

                                      2
DEBRA ANN LIVINGSTON, Circuit Judge:

        This case requires us to address two questions of law important to the

workings of the Bankruptcy Code: (1) whether indenture clauses declaring a

debtor’s default upon the filing of a voluntary bankruptcy petition and

providing for automatic debt acceleration are unenforceable ipso facto

provisions1 under § 365(e)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 365(e)(1), or

other Code provisions cited by U.S. Bank; and (2) the requirements and

consequences of an 11 U.S.C. § 1110(a) election when the only outstanding

default is an ipso facto default that triggered automatic acceleration of the

debt.

        Appellant U.S. Bank National Trust Association (“U.S. Bank”) appeals

from an order entered February 1, 2013 and two judgments entered February

11, 2013 by the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of

New York (“USBC-SDNY”) (Lane, B.J.), which: (1) authorized AMR

Corporation and American Airlines, Inc. (collectively “American” or

“Debtors”) to obtain postpetition financing; (2) authorized American to repay

certain prepetition notes held by U.S. Bank and secured by aircraft; and (3)

denied U.S. Bank’s request to lift the automatic stay. On February 28, 2013,

1  “An ipso facto clause is a clause in a contract or lease that modif[ies] the
relationship of contracting parties due to the filing of a bankruptcy petition.” In re
AMR Corp., 485 B.R. 279, 296 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2013) (alteration in original)
(internal quotation marks omitted).

                                          3
the bankruptcy court granted U.S. Bank’s motion for direct appeal to our

Court in light of the public importance of the matter and the lack of

controlling Second Circuit law in relation to questions it presents; we granted

U.S. Bank’s petition for direct appeal on April 2, 2013.

      We determine that: (1) per the language of the notes’ Indenture

Agreements (the “Indentures”), American’s voluntary petition for bankruptcy

triggered a default that accelerated the debt but required no Make-Whole

Amount payment in connection with debt repayment; (2) the pertinent

clauses, contained in nonexecutory contracts, are not within the scope of 11

U.S.C. § 365(e)(1) and are not rendered unenforceable by any other

Bankruptcy Code provision identified by U.S. Bank; (3) American complied

with its § 1110(a) elections to perform its obligations under the Indentures

and cure any non-exempt defaults by making regularly scheduled principal

and interest payments, and it was not required to cure its bankruptcy

default; and (4) the bankruptcy court did not err in denying U.S. Bank’s

motion to lift the automatic stay. Accordingly, we affirm the relevant order

and judgments of the bankruptcy court.

                                       4
                                 BACKGROUND

      AMR Corporation, parent company to American Airlines, Inc., is an

airline company with nearly 900 aircraft in operation serving customers in

the United States and throughout the world.               American commenced a

voluntary bankruptcy on November 29, 2011, which is ongoing. This case

concerns the impact of American’s bankruptcy filing on certain notes held by

U.S. Bank and secured by aircraft that American continues to operate as

debtor-in-possession.

                                          I.

      In order to finance a number of its aircraft, American entered into

three separate transactions with U.S. Bank in 2009 and 2011.                    These

transactions include the 2009-2 Secured Notes Financing (“2009-2 Note”)

issued by American in July 2009 and secured by a certain group of aircraft, 2

and two enhanced equipment trust certificate (“EETC”) financings, issued by

American in July 2009 (“2009-1 EETC”) and October 2011 (“2011-2 EETC”),

respectively, and secured by certain other groups of aircraft.3 The 2009-2

2 U.S. Bank serves as trustee and security agent for the Indenture and Security
Agreement between American Airlines, Inc. and U.S. Bank on the 2009-2 Note,
secured by twelve Boeing Aircraft.

3 In equipment trust certificate transactions, “[a] trustee issues equipment trust
certificates to investors, and uses the funds raised to buy the aircraft, which is then
leased to the airline which ordered it.” PETER S. MORELL, AIRLINE FINANCE 212 (3d
ed. 2007). An enhanced equipment trust certificate divides the certificates issued to

                                          5
Note has a maturity date of August 1, 2016; the 2009-1 EETC has a maturity

date of July 2, 2019; and the 2011-2 EETC has a maturity date of October 15,

2021.

        Each financing transaction includes an Indenture and Security

Agreement made between American Airlines, Inc. and U.S. Bank in its

capacity as Loan Trustee.4 The Indentures authorize the issuance of the

Notes and assign rights to the aircraft as collateral for American’s

obligations. The Indentures provide for regularly scheduled principal and

interest payments until maturity; such payments are distributed according to

a schedule in Section 3.01, “Basic Distributions.” However, the Indentures

also provide for alternate payment distributions to the extent that certain

delineated contingencies occur.       Accordingly, the Indentures indicate in

Section 3.01, “[e]xcept as otherwise provided in Section 3.02, Section 3.03 and

investors into different categories based on risk, see id., though the notes in
question only involve one series of equipment notes and related class, see J.A. 82
n.1. A single subordination agent holds the equipment notes on behalf of the pass-
through trust, and the trustee administers the notes and issues them to the third-
party investors. J.A. 81-82.
       For the 2009-1 EETC, U.S. Bank acts as successor loan trustee to over 20
separate Indenture and Security Agreements, each of which finances one Boeing
airframe and two Rolls Royce or CFM International aircraft engines (collectively,
“Aircraft”). For the 2011-2 EETC, U.S. Bank acts as the successor loan trustee
pursuant to over 43 separate Indenture and Security Agreements, each of which
finances an Aircraft.

4 The three separate Indenture Agreements use similar language for the relevant
contingencies and terms at issue; unless specified, we will collectively refer to the
three separate indentures as the “Indentures” and cite to the 2011-2 EETC.

                                         6
Section 3.04, each periodic payment by the Company of regularly scheduled

installments of principal or interest on the Equipment Notes received by the

Loan Trustee shall be promptly distributed in the following order of priority.”

J.A. 132.

        Section 3.02 outlines the payment distribution when an Event of Loss

(which triggers a mandatory redemption)5 or a voluntary redemption occurs,

“[e]xcept as otherwise provided in Sections 3.03 and 3.04.”6 J.A. 133. Section

3.02 specifically references Sections 2.10 and 2.11, which respectively define

mandatory7 and voluntary redemption.8             In the event of a voluntary

5 “Event of Loss” is defined in Annex A of the Indentures, and principally covers
damage to the aircraft, airframe, or engine, as well as possible takings or
requisitions by governments for extended periods of time. Section 2.10 provides
that Events of Loss trigger mandatory redemption, see J.A. 125 (“The Company
shall redeem the Equipment Notes in whole in connection with an Event of Loss.”)
(emphasis added).

6  Section 3.03 is discussed infra. Section 3.04, “Certain Payments,” concerns
payments received by the Trustee outside of the normal principal and interest
payments provided for in Section 3.01, or any payment schedule triggered by
mandatory redemption, voluntary redemption, or Events of Default. See J.A. 140.
It is not applicable to the present appeal.

7 Section 2.10 provides that mandatory redemption occurs upon an Event of Loss
and requires American to redeem the Equipment Notes in whole “at a redemption
price equal to 100% of the unpaid principal amount thereof, together with all
accrued and unpaid interest thereon to (but excluding) the date of redemption, but
without any Make-Whole Amount.” J.A. 125 (emphasis added). In the 2009-2 Note,
the mandatory redemption provision provides for different redemption scenarios
apart from the Event of Loss described in the EETC transactions, but these
differences are not at issue in the instant case. See J.A. 898-900.

8   Section 2.11 provides that American can voluntarily redeem the Equipment Notes

                                          7
redemption but not in the event of a mandatory redemption, a Make-Whole

Amount may be required.        The “Make-Whole Amount,” due if the airline

voluntarily redeems the notes prior to the maturity date, is the present value

of the remaining scheduled payments of principal and interest to maturity

using a discount rate linked to the Treasury Yield.

      Section 3.03 outlines payments to be made “after both an Event of

Default shall have occurred and be continuing and the Equipment Notes

shall have become due and payable pursuant to Section 4.02(a).” 9 J.A. 135

(emphasis added). While the Indentures distinguish between voluntary and

mandatory redemptions as to the debtor’s obligation to pay a Make-Whole

Amount, Section 3.03 expressly provides, regarding continuing Events of

Default in the context of accelerated debt, that “[n]o Make-Whole Amount

      at any time upon at least 15 days’ revocable prior written notice to the
      Loan Trustee and the Noteholders, and such Equipment Notes shall be
      redeemed in whole at a redemption price equal to 100% of the unpaid
      principal amount thereof, together with accrued and unpaid interest
      thereon to (but excluding) the date of redemption and all other Secured
      Obligations owed or then due and payable to the Noteholders, plus
      Make-Whole Amount, if any . . . .

J.A. 126. In the 2009-2 Note, voluntary redemption is listed under Section 2.20.
The only notable difference between the two sections relates to their notice
provisions, which are not material to the case at hand. See J.A. 900.

9Section 4.02(a) is discussed infra, but it broadly addresses circumstances in which
the debt owed by American is accelerated, either upon action by the Loan Trustee in
specified circumstances or automatically, upon the occurrence of certain
bankruptcy-related Events of Default.

                                         8
shall be payable on the Equipment Notes as a consequence of or in connection

with an Event of Default or the acceleration of the Equipment Notes.” J.A.

140.

       Article IV of the Indentures defines the Events of Default referred to in

Section 3.03.    There are ten Events of Default listed in Section 4.01,

including, inter alia, failure to make payment, failure to maintain insurance,

failure to abide by various covenants or conditions, and material

misrepresentations in operative documents. Section 4.01(g) identifies filing a

voluntary    petition   in   bankruptcy       or   a   voluntary   petition   “seeking

reorganization, liquidation or other relief as a debtor” as an Event of Default.

       After delineating Events of Default in Section 4.01, Section 4.02 of the

Indentures outlines remedies that the Loan Trustee “may, and upon the

written instruction of a Majority in Interest of Noteholders . . . shall” pursue

after an Event of Default occurs and continues. J.A. 144 (emphases added).

Section 4.02(a)(i) provides that upon an Event of Default, the Loan Trustee

may declare the Equipment Notes due and payable (accelerating the

maturity date); however, Section 4.02(a)(i) then specifies:

       provided that if an Event of Default referred to in Section 4.01(f),
       Section 4.01(g), Section 4.01(h) or Section 4.01(i) shall have
       occurred and be continuing, then and in every such case the
       unpaid principal amount of the Equipment Notes then
       outstanding, together with accrued but unpaid interest thereon
       and all other amounts due thereunder (but for the avoidance of

                                          9
      doubt, without Make-Whole Amount), shall immediately and
      without further act become due and payable without presentment,
      demand, protest or notice, all of which are hereby waived.

J.A. 145 (emphases added). Section 4.02(a)(ii) elaborates the three remedies

the Loan Trustee may pursue after the Loan Trustee declares the notes due

and payable or after the debt is automatically accelerated by operation of

Section 4.02(a)(i): (1) delivery of the equipment; (2) sale of the equipment; or

(3) “any other remedy of a secured party under the Uniform Commercial Code

of the State of New York.” If American defaults, the default continues, and

the debt is accelerated, “all payments received and amounts held or realized

by the Loan Trustee” are to be distributed according to the order of priority

specified in Section 3.03. See Section 3.03.

                                       II.

      On November 29, 2011, American filed a voluntary petition for

bankruptcy. On December 23, 2011, the bankruptcy court entered an order

authorizing Debtors to (1) enter into agreements under 11 U.S.C. § 1110(a) of

the Bankruptcy Code (hereinafter “§ 1110(a) elections” or “§ 1110(a)

agreement”); (2) enter into stipulations to extend the time to comply with

§ 1110; and (3) file redacted § 1110 stipulations.10       American thereafter

10Section 1110(a), to be further discussed infra, is a provision of the Bankruptcy
Code granting secured parties with a security interest in aircraft or related
equipment the power to possess the collateral “in compliance with a security
agreement, lease, or conditional sale contract” and to enforce other rights

                                       10
committed in December 2011 and January 2012 § 1110(a) elections “to

perform all obligations of the Debtors under the [Indentures] with respect to

the Aircraft Equipment” and to cure any default “other than a default of a

kind specified in section 365(b)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code.” J.A. 68. Each

election also confirmed that it did not constitute an assumption of the

underlying financing agreements, and that it was freely revocable.

      American thereafter made regularly scheduled payments of principal

and interest on February 1, 2012 and August 1, 2012. U.S. Bank did not

object in February or August 2012 that the amount paid by American was

insufficient.   As of September 30, 2012, American was indebted in the

principal amounts of $445,618,425 for the 2009-1 EETC, $174,163,156 for the

2009-2 Note, and $703,645,330 for the 2011-2 EETC.

      On October 9, 2012, Debtors filed a motion for authorization under 11

U.S.C. § 364(c) to obtain postpetition financing in the amount of $1.5 billion,

citing low interest rates available in the market.         Debtors also requested

notwithstanding application of the automatic stay under 11 U.S.C. § 362 or other
Bankruptcy Code provisions. 11 U.S.C. § 1110(a)(1). In the event that the debtor
satisfies the conditions of § 1110(a)(2) – agreeing to perform obligations under its
agreement with the secured creditor and curing any default not specified in 11
U.S.C. § 365(b)(2) – within a designated timeframe, however, the debtor effectively
makes a § 1110(a) “election” and thereby receives protection under the automatic
stay so long as it continues to comply with its election. See, e.g., In re Trans World
Airlines, Inc., 145 F.3d 124, 137 (3d Cir. 1998) (“If a § 1110 agreement is executed,
which requires court approval but not the lessor’s consent, the automatic stay
remains in effect.”).

                                         11
authorization to use the new financing to “repay certain existing prepetition

obligations secured by the Aircraft, including obligations under the

Prepetition Notes . . . without the payment of any Make-Whole Amount”

pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 363(b). See J.A. 79. U.S. Bank filed objections on

October 23, 2012 as both Loan Trustee for the EETC Transactions and as

Trustee and Security Agent for the 2009-2 Note,11 arguing that: 1) American

could only “voluntarily” redeem the notes by paying all secured obligations,

including the Make-Whole Amount; (2) the Make-Whole provisions are

enforceable under applicable law; (3) filing for bankruptcy did not

automatically accelerate the debt and any clauses that so dictated were

unenforceable ipso facto clauses; (4) if the debt was accelerated under a

bankruptcy event of default, U.S. Bank should be allowed to waive the

default and decelerate the debt; and (5) the § 1110(a) election and regular

principal and interest payments made in February and August 2012 prevent

Debtors from now attempting to repay a “default” without any Make-Whole

Amount. U.S. Bank filed complaints for declaratory relief on November 7

11U.S. Bank made separate objections for the EETC Transactions and the 2009-2
Note throughout the proceedings below, yet the bankruptcy court consolidated these
objections in its Memorandum Opinion and accompanying order and judgments. On
appeal, U.S. Bank again filed two appellant briefs and replies. As U.S. Bank’s
arguments in these two sets of briefs are virtually the same, the legal issues are
equivalent, and the relevant indenture language differs in only immaterial respects,
we adopt the bankruptcy court’s approach and refer to the separately briefed
arguments as one U.S. Bank argument.

                                        12
and November 16, 2012, and argued, in addition, that assuming the debt was

accelerated, American had not complied with its § 1110(a) elections by not

paying the full accelerated amount. In its complaints for declaratory relief,

U.S. Bank requested that the court declare that American must pay the

Make-Whole     Amount     in   accordance   with    the   Indentures’   voluntary

redemption provisions to the extent American obtains new financing and

attempts to repay the notes. U.S. Bank also requested that the bankruptcy

court lift the automatic stay to the extent necessary for U.S. Bank to waive

the alleged default and annul any acceleration.12

      The bankruptcy court issued a decision on January 17, 2013, an order

on February 1, 2013, and judgments on February 11, 2013, granting

American’s motion to secure financing and to repay its obligations, and

denying U.S. Bank’s request to lift the automatic stay. In its decision, the

court principally addressed U.S. Bank’s request that the court declare the

legal rights of the parties under the Indentures pursuant to the Declaratory

Judgment Act. See In re AMR Corp., 485 B.R. 279 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2013).

The court concluded that the Indentures clearly state that American’s

bankruptcy filing was an Event of Default that automatically accelerated the

12U.S. Bank filed a motion before the Bankruptcy Court seeking limited relief from
the automatic stay on December 6, 2012.

                                       13
debt and that in such circumstances American does not owe any Make-Whole

Amount in connection with repayment of the accelerated debt still owed.

       Addressing U.S. Bank’s arguments, the court first disagreed with the

contention that acceleration is a remedy to be invoked by the Loan Trustee

and that, because the Loan Trustee here never elected such a remedy, the

debt was not accelerated. The court concluded that the Indentures clearly

and specifically provide for automatic acceleration upon a bankruptcy-related

default and that this contractual provision is not in conflict with case law

cited by U.S. Bank.      Id. at 290-93.    The court also concluded that the

automatic stay bars U.S. Bank from waiving the Event of Default and

decelerating the debt, and that lifting the stay in order to permit U.S. Bank

to do so was not appropriate. Id. at 293-96. As to U.S. Bank’s argument that

Section 4.02(a)(i) is an ipso facto clause unenforceable under 11 U.S.C.

§ 365(e)(1), the bankruptcy court disagreed, concluding that § 365(e)(1)

pertains only to ipso facto clauses in executory contracts and unexpired

leases. Id. at 296-98.

       The bankruptcy court next addressed U.S. Bank’s argument that

American is attempting voluntarily to redeem the notes under Section 2.11(a)

of the Indentures and that, in this circumstance, a Make-Whole Amount is

due.   In light of its conclusion that filing for bankruptcy automatically

                                      14
accelerated the debt and that the Indentures distinguish between voluntary

prepayment and payments due upon automatic acceleration, the court

rejected U.S. Bank’s argument. Id. at 298-99. The court noted that case law

from the Southern District of New York and USBC-SDNY supports the

conclusion that a payment of debt due upon acceleration is different from

voluntary redemption, and the isolated parts of the Indentures cited by U.S.

Bank – such as the “Make-Whole Amount” definition and phrases concerning

voluntary redemption – neither undercut the relevance of these cases nor

point to a contrary interpretation of these Indentures. Id. at 299-304 (citing

HSBC Bank USA, Nat’l Ass’n v. Calpine Corp., No. 07-cv-3088, 2010 WL

3835200 (S.D.N.Y. Sep. 15, 2010); In re Solutia Inc., 379 B.R. 473 (Bankr.

S.D.N.Y. 2007)).

      Finally, the bankruptcy court examined 11 U.S.C. § 1110 and

American’s § 1110(a) elections and concluded that the default at issue is a

bankruptcy default that American was not required to cure under

§ 1110(a)(2)(B).   American therefore complied with the conditions of its

§ 1110(a) elections by performing its contractual obligations to make

regularly scheduled principal and interest payments.     Id. at 304-06. The

court also concluded that American’s performance in making regularly

scheduled payments did not estop American from subsequently paying the

                                     15
accelerated debt due (but protected from collection by the automatic stay),

and it observed that § 1110(a) elections do not constitute permanent

commitments to bind the debtor to their terms. Id. at 306-07. As the court

explained, the source of U.S. Bank’s unhappiness lies in the language of 11

U.S.C. § 1110 and the terms of the Indentures, both of which permit

American, in the circumstances here, to make principal and interest

payments during bankruptcy proceedings and then subsequently to repay the

accelerated debt without the Make-Whole Amount. Id. at 307-09.

      Accordingly, the court approved American’s motion for new financing

under 11 U.S.C. § 364(c), concluding that the relief sought by American was

an appropriate exercise of the Debtors’ business judgment, and that the

Debtors had sound business reasons for moving to repay obligations under 11

U.S.C. § 363(b). It authorized the postpetition financing and repayment of

financing transactions in its February 1, 2013 orders. On February 28, 2013,

the bankruptcy court granted U.S. Bank’s motion for certification for direct

appeal to this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(d)(2), stating that the

appeals present questions of law for which there is no controlling decision of

the Second Circuit and involve matters of public importance. U.S. Bank then

petitioned this Court to allow direct appeal of the bankruptcy court’s order

                                     16
and judgments, and a different Panel of this Court granted that motion on

April 2, 2013. This appeal followed.

                               DISCUSSION

      We have jurisdiction over this appeal certified from the bankruptcy

court and accepted by this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(d)(2), and we

“review the legal conclusions of the bankruptcy court . . . de novo.” In re

Bernard L. Madoff Inv. Secs. LLC, 654 F.3d 229, 234 (2d Cir. 2011). Our

review of a bankruptcy court’s denial of relief from the automatic stay is for

abuse of discretion. See In re Dairy Mart Convenience Stores, Inc., 351 F.3d

86, 91 (2d Cir. 2003).

      On appeal, U.S. Bank reiterates the arguments advanced in the

bankruptcy court. Principally, it asserts that American’s proposed debt

payment is properly construed as a voluntary prepayment under the

Indentures and thus requires payment of the Make-Whole Amount.           U.S.

Bank contends that although an Event of Default occurred when American

filed for bankruptcy in November 2011, U.S. Bank did not elect to accelerate

the debt as a remedy, and therefore – in accordance with the Debtors’

§ 1110(a) elections and regularly scheduled payments of principal and

interest – American is now trying to prepay without satisfying the

contractual obligation of the Make-Whole Amount. U.S. Bank also maintains

                                       17
that to the extent acceleration occurred automatically under Indenture

provisions by virtue of American’s bankruptcy filing, such provisions are

unenforceable ipso facto clauses. Alternatively, U.S. Bank proposes that to

the extent the Notes were accelerated, the § 1110(a) election decelerated

them, as confirmed by American’s payment of regularly scheduled principal

and interest. Finally, U.S. Bank contends that it should be permitted to

rescind any such acceleration or waive the Event of Default because such a

rescission does not violate the automatic stay but merely enforces contractual

rights and rights under § 1110.

                                  I. Indentures

      We begin with the text of the Indentures, which we interpret applying

basic contract law. Jamie Secs. Co. v. The Ltd. Inc., 880 F.2d 1572, 1576 (2d

Cir. 1989) (“It is a well-established rule in this Circuit that the

‘[i]nterpretation of [I]ndenture provisions is a matter of basic contract law.’”

(quoting Sharon Steel Corp. v. Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., 691 F.2d 1039,

1049 (2d Cir. 1982)) (alterations in Jamie)).     New York law governs the

interpretation of these Indentures, and courts applying New York law

construe a contract “so as to give full meaning and effect to all of its

provisions.” PaineWebber Inc. v. Bybyk, 81 F.3d 1193, 1199 (2d Cir. 1996)

(quoting Am. Express Bank Ltd. v. Uniroyal, Inc., 562 N.Y.S.2d 613, 614 (1st

                                       18
Dep’t 1990)); see also Consedine v. Portville Cent. Sch. Dist., 907 N.E.2d 684,

689 (N.Y. 2009) (instructing courts to read contracts as a whole and not place

“undue emphasis” upon particular words or phrases). “[W]hen parties set

down their agreement in a clear, complete document,” the New York Court of

Appeals has said, “their writing should as a rule be enforced according to its

terms. Evidence outside the four corners of the document as to what was

really intended but unstated or misstated is generally inadmissible to add to

or vary the writing.” W.W.W. Assocs., Inc. v. Giancontieri, 566 N.E.2d 639,

642 (N.Y. 1990). Whether a contract is ambiguous is a question of law for the

courts to resolve. Id.; see also S. Rd. Assocs., LLC v. Int’l Bus. Machs. Corp.,

826 N.E.2d 806, 809 (N.Y. 2005) (“Whether a contract is ambiguous is a

question of law and extrinsic evidence may not be considered unless the

document itself is ambiguous.”).

A.    American’s Voluntary Petition Triggered a Default Under the
      Indentures that Accelerated the Debt but Excluded Make-Whole Amount

      Reading the Indentures de novo, we agree with the bankruptcy court

that American’s voluntary petition for bankruptcy was an Event of Default

under Section 4.01(g) of the Indentures. Section 4.01(g) expressly defines

filing a “voluntary petition in bankruptcy or a voluntary petition or an

answer seeking reorganization, liquidation or other relief as a debtor in a

case under any bankruptcy laws or insolvency laws” as an Event of Default.

                                      19
J.A. 143.   We also agree that American’s bankruptcy filing triggered the

automatic acceleration of its debt. For non-bankruptcy Events of Default

under the Indentures, Section 4.02(a) states that the Trustee “may, and upon

the written instructions of a Majority in Interest of Noteholders, . . . shall”

“declare by written notice to [American] all the Equipment Notes to be due

and payable . . . .”   J.A. 144-45 (emphases added).13          Thus, as to non-

bankruptcy Events of Default, the Trustee has the option to invoke

acceleration as a remedy. This is not the case, however, with regard to the

voluntary filing of a bankruptcy petition, defined as an Event of Default in

Section 4.01(g). For after setting forth the general rule, Section 4.02(a)(i)

expressly states:

      provided that if an Event of Default referred to in . . . Section
      4.01(g) . . . shall have occurred and be continuing, then and in
      every such case the unpaid principal amount of the Equipment
      Notes then outstanding, together with accrued but unpaid
      interest thereon and all other amounts due thereunder (but for
      the avoidance of doubt, without Make-Whole Amount), shall
      immediately and without further act become due and payable
      without presentment, demand, protest or notice, all of which are
      hereby waived.

13 Declaring a note due and payable is accelerating the debt. See Black’s Law
Dictionary 12 (9th ed. 2009) (defining acceleration as “the advancing of a loan
agreement’s maturity date so that payment of the entire debt is due immediately”).
Acceleration “changes the date of maturity from some point in the future . . . to an
earlier date based on the debtor’s default under the contract.” Analytical Surveys,
Inc. v. Tonga Partners, L.P., 684 F.3d 36, 44 (2d Cir. 2012) (quoting NML Capital v.
Republic of Argentina, 952 N.E.2d 482, 491 (N.Y. 2011)).

                                        20
J.A. 145 (emphases added). Under New York law, “a specific provision . . .

governs the circumstance to which it is directed, even in the face of a more

general provision.” Capital Ventures Int’l v. Republic of Argentina, 652 F.3d

266, 271 (2d Cir. 2011) (citing Muzak Corp. v. Hotel Taft Corp., 133 N.E.2d

688, 690 (N.Y. 1956)). Generally, when Events of Default occur, the Loan

Trustee, acting for noteholders, can elect to declare debts due, pursue other

remedies, or let a default go unremedied. But, as made plain in Section

4.02(a)(i), the debt was automatically accelerated by American’s bankruptcy

filing.14

       We also agree with the bankruptcy court that in this circumstance –

where a Section 4.01(g) Event of Default has occurred resulting in the

automatic acceleration of the debt – the Indentures provide that no Make-

Whole Amount is due.        American’s November 29, 2011 bankruptcy filing

triggered an Event of Default (Section 4.01(g)), which automatically

accelerated the debt under Section 4.02(a)(i). And Section 4.02(a)(i) expressly

provides that this accelerated debt – “the unpaid principal amount of the

Equipment Notes then outstanding, together with accrued but unpaid

14 The bankruptcy court also posited that regardless of the language in the
Indentures, the debt is automatically accelerated by operation of law when the
debtor files a voluntary bankruptcy petition. See In re AMR Corp., 485 B.R. at 290
n.7. We agree with the bankruptcy court’s subsequent statement that we “do[] not
need to look beyond the controlling language of the operative contract,” id., and so
we do not reach this ground for the bankruptcy court’s conclusion.

                                        21
interest thereon and all other amounts due” – is “without Make-Whole

Amount” (emphasis added). Section 3.03, governing payments to be made by

American after an Event of Default “shall have occurred and be continuing

and the Equipment Notes shall have become due and payable pursuant to

Section 4.02(a),” confirms this, explicitly providing that “[n]o Make-Whole

Amount shall be payable . . . as a consequence of or in connection with an

Event of Default or the acceleration of the Equipment Notes.” J.A. 140. Prior

to October 2012 (and consistent with American’s position that it properly

made and abided by § 1110(a) elections, entitling it to the benefit of the

automatic stay) American made no attempt to pay the outstanding

accelerated debt. But this delay in no way changes the status of the parties

vis-à-vis the Indentures as of November 29, 2011: American owed and

continues to owe the outstanding principal and any unpaid interest on the

accelerated debt, but no Make-Whole Amount.

B.    U.S. Bank’s Arguments Fail           to   Refute   this   Plain   Language
      Interpretation of the Indentures

      U.S. Bank makes three arguments in an effort to refute the plain

language of the Indentures. First, U.S. Bank argues that the Trustee never

elected to accelerate the debt, and that such action by the Trustee is required

under New York law. Second, U.S. Bank asserts that even if acceleration

took place, U.S. Bank can rescind this acceleration, obliging American to pay

                                      22
a Make-Whole Amount in connection with its refinancing, and that the

bankruptcy court erred in concluding that such rescission is barred by the

automatic stay.     Finally, U.S. Bank argues that regardless whether

American’s debt was accelerated at the time it filed for bankruptcy,

American’s attempt to capitalize on favorable market conditions by paying off

the debt nearly one year later, properly understood, is a voluntary

redemption pursuant to Section 2.11, requiring payment of a Make-Whole

Amount. We discuss each argument in turn.

      1.    Automatic Acceleration Versus Trustee Election

      U.S. Bank first argues that despite the plain language of the

Indentures, “[u]nder New York law, acceleration is a remedy that

affirmatively must be chosen by lenders and cannot be invoked by

borrowers.” U.S. Bank relies principally on two cases: Wurzler v. Clifford, 36

N.Y.S.2d 516 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1942), and Tymon v. Wolitzer, 240 N.Y.S.2d 888

(N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1963). Like the bankruptcy court, we are unpersuaded.

      As the bankruptcy court noted, both Wurzler and Tymon deal with

“bare bones acceleration clauses,” which provide that any default operates so

as to make obligations due and payable without specification as to whether

any action or notice on the part of the non-defaulting creditor is required. In

re AMR Corp., 485 B.R. at 291. The Wurzler and Tymon courts interpreted

                                      23
the clauses at issue in those cases as “not self-operative,” intended simply to

give the creditor “the right to treat the entire debt as matured.” Wurzler, 36

N.Y.S.2d at 517. But as subsequent courts have recognized, these cases “did

not foreclose the ability of parties to draft acceleration provisions that would

be self-operative.” See In re Premier Entm’t Biloxi LLC, 445 B.R. 582, 627

(Bankr. S.D. Miss. 2010) (distinguishing Tymon as establishing a rule for

similar acceleration clauses but not foreclosing the availability of self-

executing acceleration clauses).   Indeed, no court applying New York law

since Tymon has cited the holdings of Wurzler or Tymon as a basis for

declining to enforce an automatic acceleration provision, and certainly not

one of the sort here: contained in an agreement that specifically differentiates

between those Events of Default pursuant to which the Loan Trustee may

declare the Equipment Notes due and payable and those Events of Default

pursuant to which the Notes “shall immediately and without further act

become due and payable without presentment, demand, protest or notice.”

J.A. 145.

      To the contrary, as we recognized in Analytical Surveys, Inc. v. Tonga

Partners, L.P., 684 F.3d 36, 44 (2d Cir. 2012), “under New York law, ‘[t]he

parties to a loan agreement are free to include provisions directing what will

happen in the event of default . . . of the debt, supplying specific terms that

                                      24
super[s]ede other provisions in the contract if those events occur.” (quoting

NML Capital v. Republic of Argentina, 952 N.E.2d 482, 491 (N.Y. 2011)

(alterations in Analytical Surveys)).    And numerous courts applying New

York law have enforced automatic acceleration provisions. See Calpine Corp.,

2010 WL 3835200, at *3 (enforcing a clause automatically accelerating debt

upon a voluntary bankruptcy filing); In re Solutia Inc., 379 B.R. at 484 (noting

that “[i]t was entirely appropriate to provide for automatic acceleration in the

Original Indenture since the giving of a notice of acceleration post-petition

would violate the automatic stay”). As the New York Court of Appeals has

stated, “[i]n rare cases, agreements providing for the acceleration of the

entire debt upon the default of the obligor may be circumscribed or denied

enforcement by utilization of equitable principles. In the vast majority of

instances, however, these clauses have been enforced at law in accordance

with their terms.” Fifty States Mgmt. Corp. v. Pioneer Auto Parks, Inc., 389

N.E.2d 113, 116 (N.Y. 1979); see also Key Int’l Mfg. Inc. v. Stillman, 480

N.Y.S.2d 528, 530 (2d Dep’t 1984) (“Acceleration clauses are quite common

and are generally enforced according to their terms. It is only in rare cases

that clauses will be denied enforcement under equitable principles.” (internal

quotation marks and citations omitted)).

                                        25
      U.S. Bank suggests that automatic acceleration provisions of the sort

here benefit lenders and that permitting American “to use Section 4.02 as a

sword” is inequitable, presenting the sort of “rare circumstance” in which

New York courts hold enforcement is properly refused. We disagree. Even

were we (unwisely) to disregard the “sensible proposition of law” that

contracts are to be enforced pursuant to their clear and unambiguous terms,

see Wallace v. 600 Partners Co., 658 N.E.2d 715, 717 (N.Y. 1995) (internal

quotation marks omitted), the automatic acceleration provision here is not

solely for the benefit of one party, but simultaneously affords potential

benefits to both: it accelerates the amount presently due for the purpose of

the noteholders’ claims against American in bankruptcy and it excludes any

Make-Whole Amount from American’s obligations, to American’s benefit.

U.S. Bank is due the outstanding principal and any applicable interest

payments when American repays its debts, but “there is no warrant, either in

law or equity, for a court to refuse enforcement of the agreement of the

parties” in the circumstances here. Fifty States Mgmt. Corp., 389 N.E.2d at

116; see also In re Solutia Inc., 379 B.R. at 484 (noting that the automatic

acceleration provision in a note indenture was “the result that [noteholders]

bargained for”).

                                     26
         2.    Rescinding the Event of Default

         U.S. Bank next argues that even assuming an automatic acceleration

occurred, it is entitled to rescind this acceleration and decelerate the debt

under Section 4.02(d) of the Indentures.15 U.S. Bank urges, as it did before

the bankruptcy court, that Section 4.02(d) permits it to rescind the automatic

acceleration so long as American is current on the principal and interest

payments under the Notes (as well as other amounts owed otherwise than by

virtue of the acceleration) and all other Events of Default have been waived.

15   Section 4.02(d) of the Indentures provides:

                At any time after the Loan Trustee has declared the unpaid
         principal amount of all Equipment Notes then outstanding to be due
         and payable, or all Equipment Notes shall have become due and
         payable as provided in the proviso to Section 4.02(a)(i), and, in either
         case, prior to the sale of any part of the Collateral pursuant to this
         Article IV, a Majority in Interest of Noteholders, by written notice to
         the Company and the Loan Trustee, may rescind and annul such
         declaration . . . if: (i) there has been paid to or deposited with the Loan
         Trustee an amount sufficient to pay all overdue installments of
         principal amount of, and interest on, the Equipment Notes, and all
         other amounts owing under the Operative Documents, that have
         become due otherwise than by such declaration of acceleration and (ii)
         all other Events of Default, other than nonpayment of principal
         amount or interest on the Equipment Notes that have become due
         solely because of such acceleration, have been either cured or waived;
         provided that no such rescission or annulment shall extend to or affect
         any subsequent default or Event of Default or impair any right
         consequent thereon.

J.A. 148. U.S. Bank also relies on Section 4.05, which provides that the Loan
Trustee may waive past defaults upon written instructions from a majority in
interest of the noteholders, after which “such default[s] shall cease to exist and any
Event of Default arising therefrom shall be deemed to have been cured for every
purpose of this Indenture.” J.A. 149.

                                             27
Because American has remained current on its payments pursuant to its

§ 1110(a) elections, U.S. Bank argues that this option is contractually

available and that by exercising it, U.S. Bank can require American to

proceed in its refinancing pursuant to Section 2.11, which provides for the

payment of a Make-Whole Amount.

      To the extent this argument concerns U.S. Bank’s contention that the

bankruptcy court abused its discretion by declining to lift the automatic stay

so that U.S. Bank may rescind acceleration or waive it, we more fully address

that argument infra.     As relevant here, suffice it to say that regardless

whether U.S. Bank may theoretically rescind the acceleration pursuant to

Section 4.02(d) of the Indentures (or waive Events of Default pursuant to

Section 4.05) the bankruptcy court did not err in concluding that any attempt

to do so would be an attempt to modify contract rights and would therefore be

subject to the automatic stay that went into effect when American made its

§ 1110(a) elections. In re AMR Corp., 485 B.R. at 294; see In re Enron Corp.,

300 B.R. 201, 212 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2003) (noting that “contract rights are

property of the estate . . . protected by the automatic stay” (internal quotation

marks omitted)); accord In re 48th St. Steakhouse, Inc., 835 F.2d 427, 431 (2d

Cir. 1987) (holding that landlord’s effort to terminate a prime tenant’s lease

violated automatic stay with respect to debtor’s sublease).

                                       28
      As of the filing of its bankruptcy petition on November 29, 2011,

American had the contractual right, pursuant to the Indentures, to repay its

accelerated debt without Make-Whole Amount. We therefore agree with the

bankruptcy court that any attempt by U.S. Bank to rescind acceleration now

– after the automatic stay has taken effect – is an effort to affect American’s

contract rights, and thus the property of the estate. See 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(1)

(the bankruptcy estate is comprised of “all legal or equitable interests of the

debtor in property as of the commencement of the case”); see also In re Albion

Disposal, Inc., 217 B.R. 394, 407-08 (W.D.N.Y. 1997) (“[I]t is well-established

. . . that a debtor’s contractual rights – including rights arising under post-

petition contracts – are included in the property of his estate.”). As in In re

Solutia, in which the bankruptcy court voided a notice from noteholders

attempting to waive another automatic acceleration provision triggered by a

bankruptcy filing in order to secure contractual payments not due in the

event of acceleration, see 379 B.R. at 476-79, U.S. Bank’s efforts here

represent “a direct attempt to get more property from the debtor and the

estate, either through a simple increase in the amount of a pro-rata plan

distribution or through recovery of a greater amount of the collateral which

secures the claim.” Id. at 485; see also In re Manville Forest Prods. Corp., 43

B.R. 293, 298 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 1984) (“Therefore . . . it . . . would have

                                      29
violated the stay, for the long-term lenders to take overt steps to accelerate

the debt without first seeking a modification of the stay from this Court.”),

rev’d on other grounds by 60 B.R. 403 (S.D.N.Y. 1986).                In such

circumstances, the bankruptcy court did not err in concluding that the

automatic stay applies, preventing any such action by U.S. Bank without

judicial intervention.

      3.    Post-Maturity Payment Not a Voluntary Redemption

      U.S. Bank argues, finally, that regardless whether American’s

November 2011 bankruptcy petition was an Event of Default triggering debt

acceleration, American’s effort in October 2012 to pay off its debt constitutes

a Section 2.11 voluntary redemption for which Section 3.02 provides for

payment of a Make-Whole Amount.            The bankruptcy court rejected this

argument, holding that the Debtors’ proposed payment is a “post-maturity

date repayment, not a prepayment,” and that in such circumstances, Section

3.03’s payment provisions, describing the order of priority for “all payments

received . . . after both an Event of Default shall have occurred and be

continuing and the Equipment Notes shall have become due and payable

pursuant to Section 4.02(a)” is applicable. In re AMR Corp., 485 B.R. at 298

(internal quotation marks and citation omitted). We agree.

                                      30
      As is already clear, American’s bankruptcy petition triggered a default,

and this default automatically accelerated the debt.            That acceleration

“change[d] the date of maturity from some point in the future . . . to an

earlier date based on the debtor’s default under the contract.” Analytical

Surveys, 684 F.3d at 44 (quoting NML Capital, 952 N.E.2d at 491). When the

event of default occurred and the debt accelerated, the new maturity date for

the debt was November 29, 2011. Consequently, American’s attempt to repay

the debt in October 2012 was not a voluntary prepayment because

“[p]repayment can only occur prior to the maturity date.” In re Solutia, 379

B.R. at 488. The soundness of this conclusion, moreover, is reinforced by the

plain text of Section 3.02, the voluntary redemption payment schedule, which

provides for potential payment of a Make-Whole Amount but itself states that

it operates “[e]xcept as otherwise provided in Section 3.03” (emphasis added).

Section 3.03 is the payment provision dealing specifically with payments in

the context of a continuing Event of Default and debt acceleration.16

16  U.S. Bank accords significance to the text of Section 2.11, which states that
Equipment Notes “may be redeemed by the Company at any time upon at least 15
days’ revocable prior written notice.” J.A. 126 (emphasis added). But this general
language carries less weight than the more specific terms contained in Sections 3.02
and 3.03. See County of Suffolk v. Alcorn, 266 F.3d 131, 139 (2d Cir. 2001). The
voluntary redemption schedule in Section 3.02 is subordinate to Section 3.03, which
undermines U.S. Bank’s argument that American’s attempt to repay its debt after
filing a bankruptcy petition can be deemed a voluntary prepayment under Section
3.02.

                                        31
      The case law dealing with similar automatic-acceleration-upon-

bankruptcy clauses in indenture agreements supports this reading. 17 In re

Solutia Inc. involved notes held by the Bank of New York and governed by an

indenture agreement. 379 B.R. at 476. The agreement provided that filing

for bankruptcy was an event of default under which the notes “shall become

immediately due and payable without any declaration or other act on the part

of the Trustee or any Holder.” Id. at 478 (quoting the Indentures). One of

the noteholders’ claims was for interest through the notes’ stated maturity

date despite the maturity date adjustment that occurred with automatic

acceleration.   The court rejected the noteholders’ claim for interest: “By

incorporating a provision for automatic acceleration, the 2009 Noteholders

made a decision to give up their future income stream in favor of having an

immediate right to collect their entire debt. Because the 2009 Notes were

automatically accelerated, any payment at this time would not be a

prepayment.” 379 B.R. at 488. The court also noted the possibility of “post-

acceleration ‘yield maintenance’” but found the indenture provisions did not

17 We are not persuaded by U.S. Bank’s attempts to distinguish these cases as
involving “no call” provisions. Both “[m]ake-whole and no-call provisions in bond
indentures protect lenders’ right to the yield that was expected at the time that they
made their loans.” In re Chemtura Corp., 439 B.R. 561, 596 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2010).
Regardless which provision is employed, when the contract explicitly excludes their
applicability upon automatic debt acceleration, the lender has no claim under either
the no-call or the make-whole when the debtor attempts to pay off the accelerated
debt.

                                         32
provide for it. Id. U.S. Bank faces a similar dilemma. See also Calpine

Corp., 2010 WL 3835200, at *4 (noting that although parties “could have

provided for the payment of premiums in the event of payment pursuant to

acceleration . . . [w]ithout such a provision . . . no damages are recoverable

after acceleration”).

      Notwithstanding the clear language of the Indentures and applicable

case law, U.S. Bank attempts to imbue ambiguity into the Indentures by

highlighting isolated Indenture provisions, most notably the definition of

“Make-Whole Amount” in the Indentures’ Annex A. This definition begins by

stating:

      “Make-Whole Amount” means . . . the amount (as determined by
      an independent investment banker selected by the Company
      (and, following the occurrence and during the continuance of an
      Event of Default, reasonably acceptable to the Loan
      Trustee)) . . . .

J.A. 222. U.S. Bank argues that the parenthetical’s reference to a Make-

Whole Amount to be determined “following the occurrence and during the

continuance of an Event of Default” establishes that such an amount may be

payable following an Event of Default and that this is inconsistent with

American’s claim that it owes no Make-Whole Amount pursuant to the plain

language of both Sections 3.03 and 4.02(a)(i). We are not persuaded.

                                     33
      Section 3.03, as previously noted, governs payments made by American

after an Event of Default “shall have occurred and be continuing and the

Equipment Notes shall have become due and payable pursuant to Section

4.02(a)” (providing for debt acceleration either at the option of the Loan

Trustee upon the occurrence of some Events of Default or, in the context of a

bankruptcy-related default such as the one specified in Section 4.01(g),

automatically). J.A. 135. Section 3.03 expressly provides that “[n]o Make-

Whole Amount shall be payable on [such] Equipment Notes as a consequence

of or in connection with an Event of Default or the acceleration of the

Equipment Notes.” J.A. 140.

      U.S. Bank is correct that there are scenarios pursuant to the plain

terms of the Indentures in which an Event of Default could occur and

continue and a Make-Whole Amount would be due. Thus, one can postulate

an Event of Default under Section 4.01(c) (such as failure to carry insurance),

after which the Loan Trustee does not elect to remedy the default, the failure

to carry insurance continues, and then six months later, the Debtor attempts

to pay off all outstanding – and nonaccelerated – principal. Such an attempt

would likely qualify as a voluntary redemption and a Make-Whole Amount

would be owed pursuant to Section 3.02.         (Section 3.03 would not be

triggered, because it applies only when an Event of Default occurs, continues,

                                      34
and the debt is accelerated.) Thus, contrary to U.S. Bank’s assertions, the

Make-Whole Amount definition’s parenthetical is not rendered “meaningless”

by affording Section 3.03 its plain meaning. For while in some scenarios

American might owe a Make-Whole Amount in connection with a voluntary

redemption during the persistence of an Event of Default, this is simply not

true regarding the scenario here.

      U.S Bank argues, next, that Section 3.03, by its terms, only excludes

payment of a Make-Whole Amount “as a consequence of or in connection with

an Event of Default or the acceleration of the Equipment Notes,” and that the

post-maturity repayment that American now attempts is not, in fact, “a

consequence of or in connection with” either its bankruptcy filing or debt

acceleration but is, instead, an attempt to take advantage of low interest

rates. We need not parse the meanings of “consequence” or “connection” to

reject U.S. Bank’s interpretation.   U.S. Bank again focuses on isolated

phrases in the Indentures.    Given Section 4.02(a)(i)’s directive that debt

acceleration upon a voluntary bankruptcy filing is automatic and that in this

circumstance the debt owed is “for the avoidance of doubt, without Make-

Whole Amount” (emphasis added), Section 3.03 must clearly be read to

exclude the payment of any Make-Whole Amount where an Event of Default

                                     35
has occurred, is continuing, and debt acceleration has taken place – precisely

the circumstance here.

      In conclusion, as of November 29, 2011 and as a matter of contract,

American owed the entire accelerated debt of principal and interest but no

Make-Whole Amount.         Because we find the relevant language of the

Indentures to be unambiguous, moreover, we reject U.S. Bank’s alternative

argument to the effect that discovery should have been undertaken as to the

proper interpretation of the disputed provisions.

               II. Ipso Facto Clauses and 11 U.S.C. § 365(e)(1)

      U.S. Bank next argues that even assuming the preceding interpretation

of the Indentures is correct (that American’s bankruptcy filing was an Event

of Default pursuant to Section 4.01(g) that automatically triggered debt

acceleration in accord with Section 4.02(a)(i)), default and automatic

acceleration provisions of this sort – ipso facto provisions “modify[ing] the

relationships of contracting parties due to the filing of a bankruptcy petition,”

In re Chateaugay Corp., 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6130, at *14 (S.D.N.Y. May

10, 1993) – are “broadly unenforceable” under the Bankruptcy Code. U.S.

Bank is correct that Sections 4.01(g) and 4.02(a)(i) are indeed ipso facto

clauses. See In re Lehman Bros. Holdings Inc., 422 B.R. 407, 414 (Bankr.

S.D.N.Y. 2010) (defining ipso facto clauses as clauses within a contract that

                                       36
“seek to modify the relationships of contracting parties due to the filing of a

bankruptcy petition”). But its argument that the Code categorically prohibits

enforcement of such clauses – and that these clauses, in particular, are

unenforceable – is without merit.

      U.S. Bank relies on three provisions in the Bankruptcy Code that

decline enforcement of ipso facto clauses in specified circumstances. First is

§ 365(e)(1) of the Code, which provides in relevant part as follows:

            Notwithstanding a provision in an executory contract or
      unexpired lease . . . an executory contract or unexpired lease of
      the debtor may not be terminated or modified, and any right or
      obligation under such contract or lease may not be terminated or
      modified, at any time after the commencement of the case solely
      because of a provision in such contract or lease that is
      conditioned on—
            (A) the insolvency or financial condition of the debtor at
            any time before the closing of the case;
            (B) the commencement of a case under this title; or
            (C) the appointment of or taking possession by a trustee in
            a case under this title or a custodian before such
            commencement.

11 U.S.C. § 365(e)(1). By its terms, § 365(e)(1) is inapplicable here. Both

parties agree that the Indentures are not executory contracts – contracts “on

which performance remains due to some extent on both sides,” In re Penn

Traffic Co., 524 F.3d 373, 379 (2d Cir. 2008) (quoting N.L.R.B. v. Bildisco &

Bildisco, 465 U.S. 513, 522 n.6 (1984)); see also Vernon Countryman,

Executory Contracts in Bankruptcy: Part I, 57 Minn. L. Rev. 439, 460 (1973)

                                       37
(defining executory contract as one “under which the obligation of both the

bankrupt and the other party to the contract are so far unperformed that the

failure of either to complete performance would constitute a material breach

excusing performance of the other”), and neither argues that this case

involves an unexpired lease. The bankruptcy court therefore did not err in

concluding that “Section 4.02(a)(i) is not an invalid ipso facto clause”

pursuant to this provision. In re AMR Corp., 485 B.R. at 297.

      The two remaining provisions, § 541(c)(1)(B) and § 363(l), are similarly

inapposite.   Section 541(c)(1)(B) provides that once a bankruptcy case is

commenced, any property interests of the debtor become property of the

bankruptcy estate, notwithstanding any ipso facto clause that “effects or

gives an option to effect a forfeiture, modification, or termination of the

debtor’s interest in property.” See id. (“[A]n interest of the debtor in property

becomes property of the estate . . . notwithstanding any provision in an

agreement” that is “conditioned on the insolvency or financial condition of the

debtor” or on the commencement of a bankruptcy case “and that effects or

gives an option to effect a forfeiture, modification, or termination of the

debtor’s interest in property”).   But Sections 4.01(g) and 4.02(a)(i) do not

prevent property of American from becoming property of the estate. Finally,

§ 363 of the Code gives the bankruptcy trustee general powers to use, sell, or

                                       38
lease property of the estate, see id. § 363(b), (c), and § 363(l) makes clear that

the trustee has such powers, notwithstanding any ipso facto clause, see id. §

363(l) (“Subject to the provisions of section 365, the trustee may use, sell, or

lease property under subsection (b) or (c) of this section . . . notwithstanding

any provision in a contract, a lease, or applicable law that is conditioned on

the insolvency or financial condition of the debtor” or the commencement of a

bankruptcy case “and that effects, or gives an option to effect, a forfeiture,

modification, or termination of the debtor’s interest in such property”). The

Indenture clauses at issue here, however, do not prevent the bankruptcy

trustee from using, selling, or leasing estate property, and so do not fall

within § 363(l)’s terms.

      U.S. Bank argues that these statutory provisions “broadly prohibit the

enforcement” of ipso facto clauses, and apparently regardless whether they by

their terms apply.     The Appellant cannot identify any provision of the

Bankruptcy Code, however, that provides support for such a per se

prohibition. Moreover, the specificity of the provisions on which U.S. Bank

does rely – which demonstrate that Congress clearly knows how to limit or

negate the effect of ipso facto clauses when it wants to – counsels against the

position that U.S. Bank urges here. As in Travelers Casualty & Surety Co. of

America v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co., 549 U.S. 443, 452 (2007), “[t]he absence

                                       39
of textual support is fatal” to U.S. Bank’s position that ipso facto provisions

are broadly or categorically denied enforcement by the Code. The bankruptcy

court did not err in rejecting this argument.

                           III. 11 U.S.C. § 1110(a) Elections

         U.S. Bank’s penultimate arguments on appeal concern 11 U.S.C.

§ 1110(a) and American’s December 2011 and January 2012 elections

committing the Debtors “to perform all obligations . . . under the [Indentures]

with respect to the Aircraft Equipment” and to cure any default (other than a

default “of a kind specified in section 365(b)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code”).

Section 1110(a)(1) provides generally that creditors with a secured interest in

aircraft or related equipment may repossess their collateral or enforce other

rights under a “security agreement, lease, or conditional sales contract” with

the debtor notwithstanding, inter alia, § 362’s automatic stay.18 As we have

18   11 U.S.C. § 1110(a)(1) provides as follows:

                Except as provided in paragraph (2) and subject to subsection
         (b), the right of a secured party with a security interest in equipment
         described in paragraph (3), or of a lessor or conditional vendor of such
         equipment, to take possession of such equipment in compliance with a
         security agreement, lease, or conditional sale contract, and to enforce
         any of its other rights or remedies, under such security agreement,
         lease, or conditional sale contract, to sell, lease, or otherwise retain or
         dispose of such equipment, is not limited or otherwise affected by any
         other provision of this title or by any power of the court.

As set forth infra, paragraph (2) of § 1110(a), referenced in § 1110(a)(1), provides a
means by which a debtor may secure the protection of the automatic stay
notwithstanding § 1110(a)(1). Section 1110(b) specifies circumstances in which the

                                             40
said, Congress in § 1110(a) “intend[ed] to extend extraordinary protection to

financiers of aircraft,” providing them heightened ability to protect their

collateral in bankruptcy proceedings, “in order to encourage investment in

new equipment for air carriers.” In re Air Vt., Inc., 761 F.2d 130, 132 (2d Cir.

1985); see also In re Trans World Airlines, 145 F.3d 124, 137 (3d Cir. 1998)

(“Section 1110 was designed in part to increase availability of low-interest

capital to the transportation industry.”).      At the same time, pursuant to

§ 1110(a)(2), a debtor like American may secure the protection of the

automatic stay (preventing, inter alia, repossession of its equipment) if

within 60 days of a bankruptcy filing it: (1) agrees to perform “all obligations

of the debtor” pursuant to its agreement with the secured creditor; and (2) it

cures any default not “of a kind specified in section 365(b)(2)” within a

defined period.19 Section 1110(a) elections of the sort American made here

time period in which the debtor must act pursuant to § 1110(a)(2) may be extended,
and is not relevant to this appeal.

19As the bankruptcy court noted, § 1110(a)(2) refers to the trustee, not the debtor,
but the trustee in this case, as in most cases under Chapter 11, is the debtor-in-
possession. In re AMR, 485 B.R. at 305 n.26. Section 1110(a)(2) provides as follows:

           The right to take possession and to enforce the other rights and
      remedies described in paragraph (1) shall be subject to section 362 if—

            (A) before the date that is 60 days after the date of the order for
            relief under this chapter, the trustee, subject to the approval of
            the court, agrees to perform all obligations of the debtor under
            such security agreement, lease, or conditional sale contract; and

                                        41
“require[ ] court approval but not the [secured creditor’s] consent.”         In re

Trans World Airlines, 145 F.3d at 137.

     U.S. Bank makes three arguments regarding § 1110. First, U.S. Bank

argues that the Debtors’ election to “perform all obligations” under the

Indentures pursuant to § 1110(a)(2) requires the Debtors to abide by all the

terms of the Indentures, including the requirement to pay the Make-Whole

Amount.     Second, U.S. Bank argues that assuming the Notes were

accelerated pursuant to Section 4.02(a)(i) of the Indentures upon American’s

bankruptcy filing (so that no Make-Whole Amount need be paid upon their

post-maturity repayment) American’s § 1110(a) elections and regular

payments of principal and interest pursuant to these elections had the effect

of decelerating the Notes. Finally, U.S. Bank argues that if the Notes were

accelerated and American’s § 1110(a) elections did not decelerate them, then

           (B) any default, other than a default of a kind specified in
           section 365(b)(2), under such security agreement, lease, or
           conditional sale contract—
                  (i) that occurs before the date of the order is cured before
                  the expiration of such 60-day period;
                  (ii) that occurs after the date of the order and before the
                  expiration of such 60-day period is cured before the later
                  of—
                          (I) the date that is 30 days after the date of the
                          default; or
                          (II) the expiration of such 60-day period; and
                  (iii) that occurs on or after the expiration of such 60-day period
                  is cured in compliance with the terms of such security
                  agreement, lease, or conditional sale contract, if a cure is
                  permitted under that agreement, lease, or contract.

                                       42
American has not cured its defaults as required by § 1110(a)(2) because since

it entered into its elections, American has remitted only principal and

interest payments but not the accelerated amount. Accordingly, says U.S.

Bank, American is not (and never was) entitled to the protection of the

automatic stay. For the following reasons, we are not persuaded.

      1. Section 1110(a)(2) Does Not Require Assumption of the Indentures

      U.S. Bank’s first argument – that American’s commitment in its

§ 1110(a)(2) elections to “perform all obligations” under the Indentures

requires it to pay a Make-Whole Amount – is but a reprise of its arguments

pursuant to the Indentures themselves, and it fails for the same reason. U.S.

Bank is correct that in order to maintain the protection of the automatic stay,

American is required pursuant to § 1110(a)(2)(A) to perform its obligations

under the Indentures, with the exception that it need not cure defaults “of a

kind specified in section 365(b)(2).” 11 U.S.C. § 1110(a)(2). But contrary to

U.S. Bank’s claim, American’s commitment “to perform all obligations” under

the Indentures while the automatic stay remains in effect does not obligate it

to pay a Make-Whole Amount pursuant to Section 3.02. American’s debt was

accelerated pursuant to Section 4.02(a)(i) upon its bankruptcy filing and

American is not now voluntarily redeeming the notes, but attempting to

                                      43
effect a post-maturity date repayment. No Make-Whole Amount is now or

has ever been due pursuant to the Indentures.

      U.S. Bank’s second argument is, in effect, a response to the preceding

point: U.S. Bank argues that American is attempting a voluntary redemption

(and so owes a Make-Whole Amount) because American’s § 1110(a) elections

themselves decelerated its debt, returning it to its pre-bankruptcy filing

position.   U.S. Bank cites no pertinent authority for this proposition,

however, and for a simple reason: there isn’t any. Section 1110(a)(2) does not

modify the parties’ contractual relationship or commit the debtor to an

assumption of any such modified relationship, but simply provides a

mechanism by which an airline can gain the protection of the automatic stay

notwithstanding § 1110(a)(1).20 Thus, American’s elections, for the period it

complies with them, merely establish an interim arrangement in bankruptcy

pursuant to which it is entitled to the benefit of the automatic stay. The

20 The text of Section 1110(a) makes this clear enough, but it is also confirmed in
relevant case law. See, e.g., In re Trans World Airlines, 145 F.3d at 137 (“A § 1110
agreement . . . operates neither as an assumption nor as a rejection of the entire
lease . . . [and] after the § 1110 agreement is made, the debtor remains free to make
a formal assumption or rejection of the lease and, until that time or such time as
the § 1110 agreement is breached or terminated, the automatic stay of § 362
remains in effect.”); In re Airlift Int’l, Inc., 761 F.2d 1503, 1508 (11th Cir. 1985)
(noting that “the debtor upon entering into a section 1110 stipulation does not
assume and is not ultimately liable for performance of the contract”); In re Enron
Corp., 300 B.R. 201, 213 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2003) (“A debtor’s decision to elect to
receive benefits under a contract post-petition does not translate into an obligation
to assume the contract, because a debtor cannot assume a contract by implication.”).

                                         44
bankruptcy court therefore correctly determined that American’s § 1110(a)

elections and its payments pursuant to these elections did not alter

American’s ability to repay the accelerated debt pursuant to the terms of the

Indentures. In re AMR Corp., 485 B.R. at 307.

      2. Section 1110(a)(2) Does Not Require Cure of a Bankruptcy Default

      That brings us to U.S. Bank’s third and final argument pursuant to

§ 1110(a): that if the debt was accelerated under Section 4.02(a)(i) and if

American’s § 1110(a)(2) elections did not decelerate this debt, returning the

parties to their pre-bankruptcy position, then American has failed to cure its

default as to this accelerated debt by paying it off and thus is not (and never

was) entitled to the protection of the automatic stay. According to U.S. Bank,

when American made its § 1110(a) elections in December 2011 and January

2012, it promised, as the statute requires, to perform all obligations under

the Indentures and to cure any default other than a default of a kind

specified in § 365(b)(2). But assuming American’s entire debt was due and

payable at that time, U.S. Bank asserts that American did not and has not

subsequently cured this default by paying it off. Accordingly, American was

never entitled to the protection of the automatic stay. Its secured creditors

should therefore be declared free to exercise whatever rights and remedies

the Indentures afford to them (including, presumably, the right to rescind

                                      45
acceleration pursuant to Section 4.02(d) or to waive default as to acceleration

and thus to require payment of a Make-Whole Amount in connection with

American’s refinancing).

      We note that U.S. Bank did not object to American’s § 1110 notices in

December 2011 and January 2012 on the ground that American had not and

was not intending to pay the full accelerated debt, even though each such

notice makes clear that American proposed to pay only regularly scheduled

principal and interest payments in availing itself of § 1110(a)(2). In October

2012, when American moved before the bankruptcy court to effect its post-

petition refinancing, moreover, U.S. Bank did not argue that the § 1110(a)(2)

elections were invalid from the start by virtue of American’s failure to pay

back the full accelerated amount, but instead acknowledged that “Section

1110 permitted the Debtors to make the 1110(a) Agreement and to perform

under the Aircraft Agreements, including by making regularly scheduled

payments of principal and interest, as if the bankruptcy Event of Default

under Section 4.01(g) of the Indenture had never occurred.” (emphasis

added).21 The instant argument was eventually made before the bankruptcy

21 The objection filed in connection with the EETC Indentures similarly noted that
“[t]he only existing default under the Prepetition Notes Indentures is the ‘ipso facto’
default arising under Section 4.01(g) thereof as a result of the commencement of
these chapter 11 cases, and that default is rendered unenforceable by section
1110(a)(2)(B).”

                                          46
court in November 2012. But this was after U.S. Bank had already accepted

payments of principal and interest from American in February and August

2012.

        At any rate (and however U.S. Bank’s position may have shifted below)

we conclude that U.S. Bank’s argument fails on the merits. Turning again to

the text of § 1110(a)(2)(A), a debtor need not cure a default “of a kind

specified in 11 U.S.C. § 365(b)(2)” in order to obtain the benefit of the

automatic stay. A § 365(b)(2) default in turn is:

        [A] default that is a breach of a provision relating to–
              (A) the insolvency or financial condition of the debtor at
              any time before the closing of the case;
              (B) the commencement of a case under this title;
              (C) the appointment of or taking possession by a trustee in
              a case under this title or a custodian before such
              commencement; or
              (D) the satisfaction of any penalty rate or penalty provision
              relating to a default arising from any failure by the debtor
              to perform nonmonetary obligations under the executory
              contract or unexpired lease.

11 U.S.C. § 365(b)(2).22    Thus, American was not required to pay off its

accelerated debt to obtain the benefit of the automatic stay pursuant to

22Section 365(b)(2) is part of a Code provision dealing with executory contracts and
unexpired leases. Paragraph (1) of § 365(b) sets forth conditions (such as cure of
outstanding defaults) that the bankruptcy trustee must satisfy before assuming an
executory contract or unexpired lease pursuant to which there has been a default,
while § 365(b)(2), set forth in relevant part here, describes defaults to which
Paragraph (1) is inapplicable.

                                        47
§ 1110(a)(2) if the failure to do so is a default “of a kind specified in”

§ 365(b)(2). We conclude that it is.

      Section 365(b)(2) concerns itself, broadly, with “contract provisions that

force debtors into default merely for becoming insolvent or seeking

bankruptcy protection” or that impose penalties for defaults which are “often

a product of the debtor’s very financial distress.” In re BankVest Capital

Corp., 360 F.3d 291, 301 (1st Cir. 2004); see also In re Rickel Home Ctrs., Inc.,

209 F.3d 291, 298 (3d Cir. 2000). It explicitly lists among the defaults with

which it is concerned “a default that is a breach of a provision relating to . . .

the commencement of a [bankruptcy] case.” 11 U.S.C. § 365(b)(2)(B). As is

by now clear, the default that triggered the acceleration of American’s debt

was its breach of Section 4.01(g) of the Indentures, which defines an “Event of

Default” as occurring when “the Company shall file a voluntary petition in

bankruptcy or a voluntary petition . . . seeking reorganization, liquidation or

other relief as a debtor.”      And debt acceleration, pursuant to Section

4.02(a)(i), followed automatically from this bankruptcy default.

      We conclude that American was not required to pay off the accelerated

debt to gain the protection of the automatic stay.          The default of this

obligation was “of a kind specified in section 365(b)(2)” – namely, the breach

of a provision relating to the commencement of a bankruptcy case. 11 U.S.C.

                                       48
§ 1110(a)(2)(B). Section 1110(a)(2)(B) does not negate such defaults, but it

does permit the debtor to postpone their consequences – as U.S. Bank noted

in one of its October 2012 filings: “to make the 1110(a) Agreement and to

perform under the Aircraft Agreements, including by making regularly

scheduled payments of principal and interest, as if the bankruptcy Event of

Default under Section 4.01(g) of the Indenture had never occurred.” For the

period in which American sought protection of the automatic stay, it was

obligated to make its scheduled principal and interest payments in order to

obtain the benefit of the automatic stay, but not to pay off the accelerated

debt, due only as a result of its bankruptcy filing. See In re Trans World

Airlines, 145 F.3d at 138 (noting that under 11 U.S.C. § 1110(a), a debtor

must perform “according to pre-bankruptcy terms” (emphasis omitted)); In re

Airlift Int’l, 761 F.2d at 1513 (noting that “Congress defined the adequate

protection necessary [for creditors] to be the guarantee of installment

payments under the note or lease for as long as the debtor retains possession

of the aircraft”).

      Accordingly, we hold that under the terms of § 1110(a)(2) and

American’s § 1110(a) elections, American did not have to cure its Section

4.01(g) default or pay off the automatically accelerated debt triggered by its

bankruptcy filing to obtain the protection of the automatic stay. American’s

                                     49
payments of principal and interest to U.S. Bank in February and August

2012 were thus in compliance with its § 1110(a)(2) obligations. And because

a § 1110(a)(2) election does not modify the parties’ contract or constitute the

debtor’s assumption of the contract, but merely sets forth conditions pursuant

to which the debtor may obtain the benefit of the automatic stay, American’s

subsequent application in October 2012 to repay its still-accelerated debt

(and thus end the period in which the automatic stay would apply) did not in

any way contravene § 1110(a). U.S. Bank’s arguments to the contrary are

without merit.

                                     IV.

      Finally, U.S. Bank argues that the bankruptcy court erred in denying

its motion to lift the automatic stay. U.S. Bank argues that if American’s

debt is accelerated and if its § 1110(a) elections are proper but did not have

the effect of themselves decelerating the debt, the automatic stay should be

lifted so that U.S. Bank may waive American’s Section 4.01(g) default and

decelerate the debt.   The court’s decision denying U.S. Bank’s motion is

reviewable only for an abuse of discretion. In re Mazzeo, 167 F.3d 139, 142

(2d Cir. 1999).

      Our Court has referenced twelve factors in considering the propriety of

lifting the automatic stay, recognizing that not all of these factors will be

                                      50
relevant in all cases. See In re Bogdanovich, 292 F.3d 104, 110 (2d Cir. 2002)

(citing In re Sonnax Indus., 907 F.2d 1280, 1285-86 (2d Cir. 1990)). The

bankruptcy court generally found relevant factor two, relating to the impact

of lifting the stay on the bankruptcy case, and factor twelve, concerning the

impact of the stay on the parties and the balance of harms. In re AMR Corp.,

485 B.R. at 295.

        We find no abuse of discretion in the bankruptcy court’s conclusion that

lifting the automatic stay would serve only to increase the size of U.S. Bank’s

claim (to an amount greater than that to which it is entitled pursuant to the

Indentures), harming the estate and American’s other creditors.23 “One of

the principal purposes of the automatic stay is to preserve the property of the

debtor’s estate for the benefit of all the creditors.” In re Prudential Lines Inc.,

928 F.2d 565, 573 (2d Cir. 1991). We conclude that the bankruptcy court did

not abuse its discretion in denying U.S. Bank’s motion to lift the automatic

stay.

23 We do not reach the bankruptcy court’s brief discussion of U.S. Bank’s bringing
its motion for the first time over a year after American declared bankruptcy. See In
re AMR Corp., 485 B.R. at 295.

                                        51
                               CONCLUSION

To summarize, we conclude that:

     (1)   Under the language of the Indentures, American’s voluntary

           petition for bankruptcy triggered a default and automatically

           accelerated the debt, the satisfaction of which requires no make-

           whole payment;

     (2)   ipso   facto   clauses   in    a   nonexecutory   contract   are   not

           unenforceable pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 365(e) or any other

           Bankruptcy Code provision identified by U.S. Bank;

     (3)   American complied with its 11 U.S.C. § 1110(a) elections to

           perform its obligations under the Indentures and cure any non-

           exempt defaults by making regularly scheduled principal and

           interest payments; it was not required to cure its Section 4.01(g)

           default; and

     (4)   the bankruptcy court did not abuse its discretion in denying U.S.

           Bank’s motion to lift the automatic stay.

Accordingly, the judgment of the bankruptcy court is AFFIRMED.

                                         52