Solutions and Alternatives to Bankruptcy in the Cannabis Industry and Financing Options Available 

May, 2020 - Richard P. Ormond, Richard P. Ormond

A Marijuana Related Business (or MRB), whether a plant-touching operation or a provider of goods and services to a plant-touching operations cannot seek protection from the Bankruptcy Court as Bankruptcy Court is a Federal Court and Cannabis remains illegal at the Federal level.  As such, an MRB does not have the benefit of an court approved restructuring as provided by Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code and does not receive the benefit of an orderly liquidation as provided by Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code.

Historical Considerations

Before the emergence of the Bankruptcy Code, businesses and their creditors had very few options available to undertake a court-supervised restructuring or liquidation other than seeking the appointment of a court neutral, typically called a Receiver or Special Master.  That “neutral” would take the business or its assets into “legal custody” or custodia legis and begin the process of dissolving the entities, selling the assets or otherwise sell the business as a going-concern.  In the 1880s and 1890s with the Gilded Age coming to an abrupt halt, this process was successfully used to restructure and recapitalize the failing network of over-extended railways and rail lines, leading to the consolidation in the market that remains to this day.

In the 1930s, with the Great Depression, the Federal Judiciary, established “reference” courts to deal specifically with bankrupt businesses and individuals laying the foundations for the modern bankruptcy code which is still in effect today.   Many of those first precedents used to establish the Bankruptcy Code and Rules were drawn directly from the Receivership case law and Receivership statutes ever-present in the historical record of common law cases and common law countries, reaching all the way back to the Courts of Chancery in Britain established soon after the Norman invasion of the British Isles in 1066.

In the United States, the equitable power of courts to initiate Receiverships or other insolvency proceedings and crafting orders and decrees based on equity, as opposed as based on law or statute, is codified clearly in Article III of the United States Constitution.  Today, Receiverships and Special Masters are still utilized by State and Federal Courts to remedy unique circumstances where a simple bankruptcy cannot address the inequities presented in that case.

State Court Powers and Financing of Receivership Estates

State Courts in particular, and California especially, have a wide body of case law supporting the equitable powers of the Court, the quasi-judicial immunity of the Receiver and the many equitable tools available to Receivers.  These powers include the negotiation and transfer of liens, with liens attaching to proceeds of sales of assets, the dissolution of a business, and the establishment of a claims process akin to a bankruptcy or assignment for benefit of creditors.

One of the many overlooked powers of a Receiver is the Receiver’s ability to bring in outside financing or capital to fund the Receivership Estate to maintain a business as a going concern or to provide short term leverage so that assets can be properly maintained, “dusted off” and sold.

This process of bringing in new capital is typically done by the issuance of Receivership Certificates.  These Certificates are approved, ahead of time, by the Court and courts can authorize that such Certificates prime all other claims (including sometimes administrative claims) and that these Certificates can be reduced to a security interest recorded against real or personal property.

The Mechanics of a Receivership

However, because Cannabis is approved at the State level, State Courts retain their equitable powers and the power to appoint a Receiver over a business in need of restructuring or liquidation.   There are many avenues to get to Court for this benefit, but the primary path to a Receivership is either through a creditor (or group of creditors) filing a lawsuit and seeking the appointment of a Receiver.  This scenario can be done through cooperation and stipulation but can be hostile as well. Or, a Legal Entity, can seek dissolution protection from the State Court and seek an neutral dissolution officer (a Receiver) to manage that process which may include the infusion of new capital through Receivership Certificates, the sale of assets to third parties, the negotiation and payment of liens and claims through a claims process and the final restructure of dissolution of the Legal Entity in a manner similar to a Bankruptcy or Assignment for Benefit of Creditors.   This voluntary petition is permitted by statute and case law and is a mechanism available to a business that is unable to file for Bankruptcy protection but is in dire need of court supervision and authority to work through its insolvency problems.    Further, by Court order, a Receiver is able to establish banking relations where an MRB may be unable.

Typically, it is recommended that any Receivership filing whether by creditors, claimants or the business itself, be guided by a well-written, explicit order that outlines the parameters of the Receivership, the funding requirements and limits, the rights of claimants and some sort of stay of claims against the Receivership Estate to give the Receiver the time needed to work through all of the issues in that Receivership Estate.   Further, outside funding can be pre-approved by the Court and the priority of that funding can be established through the open process that the Court provides, much akin to a Debtor in Possession or DIP financing motion in Bankruptcy Court.

Because of the unique circumstance that MRBs find themselves in here in California, where they are a legal and now an “essential” business but still cannot receive the benefits of Bankruptcy Court, the Receiver option is available and open to address the needs of insolvency for this rapidly expanding industry.

By Richard P. Ormond[1]

[1] Richard Ormond is a Receiver and he is also a shareholder at Buchalter, APC.   

He is the chair of Buchalter’s Receivership Department and he is also the founder and Co-chair of the firms Cannabis Law Department, now celebrating its tenth year. Mr. Ormond is also in his sixth year as Co-chair of the California Receiver’s Forum and he is the former chair of the LACBA Remedies Section.  He is considered one of the top Receivership lawyers in the United States and is also ranked in the top 100 Cannabis Business Lawyers in the United States by various industry organizations.

 



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