In re Boy Scouts of America – Statutory Mootness Shields § 363(b) Sales
Introduction
In this consolidated appeal arising from the Third Circuit’s decision in In re Boy Scouts of America and Delaware BSA, LLC (605 F.4th 178 (3d Cir. 2025)), the Court addressed challenges to the confirmation of a Chapter 11 plan designed to resolve tens of thousands of sexual‐abuse claims against the Boy Scouts of America (BSA). After nearly two years of mediation, BSA’s plan created a $2.48 billion Settlement Trust, funded in large part by “buy-back” of decade-old abuse-coverage insurance policies under § 363(b). Four appellant groups—two groups of abuse survivors (the Lujan and Dumas & Vaughn claimants) and two groups of non-settling insurers (the Certain Insurers and Allianz Insurers)—appealed the plan’s confirmation order.
The abuse survivors asked for wholesale reversal of BSA’s plan, contending that non-consensual third-party releases violated the Supreme Court’s intervening ruling in Harrington v. Purdue Pharma. The insurers sought narrower corrections to preserve their coverage rights. The Third Circuit’s opinion upholds the plan against the claimants under § 363(m)’s “statutory mootness” rule, rejects the claimants’ challenge to insurer-policy releases as untimely, and then divides the insurers’ appeals—affirming as to the Certain Insurers and granting relief to the Allianz Insurers.
Summary of the Judgment
- Jurisdiction. The Court held that the bankruptcy court properly exercised “related to” jurisdiction over the third-party claims because (a) BSA and its non-debtor affiliates shared insurance coverage, and (b) BSA had indemnity obligations that could be triggered by claims against local councils and chartered organizations.
- Statutory Mootness (§ 363(m)). The Court applied 11 U.S.C. § 363(m) to bar the Lujan and Dumas & Vaughn claimants from reversing the insurance buy-back transactions, holding that the Settling Insurers were good-faith purchasers and that vacating the policy-buy-backs would “affect the validity of the sale.”
- Equitable Mootness. The appeals of the non-settling insurers were not barred under equitable mootness because the narrow relief they sought would not “fatally scramble” BSA’s reorganizational plan or cause significant third-party harm.
- Certain Insurers. Their request for plan amendments to preserve defenses and coverage rights failed on the merits—existing plan language already protected those rights.
- Allianz Insurers. The Court held that the plan’s “judgment-reduction” clause impermissibly extinguished potential contribution and excess-defense claims against the Settling Insurers. The confirmation order must be amended to allow full recovery on those excess claims.
Analysis
Precedents Cited
- Harrington v. Purdue Pharma, 603 U.S. 204 (2024) – Non-consensual third-party releases exceed § 1123(b)(6) “plan” powers.
- In re Energy Future Holdings, 949 F.3d 806 (3d Cir. 2020) – § 363(m) bars appeals that “affect the validity” of unstayed § 363(b) sales by good-faith purchasers.
- Pacor v. Higgins, 743 F.2d 984 (3d Cir. 1984) – “Related to” jurisdiction test: conceivable effect on the estate.
- In re Millennium Lab Holdings, 945 F.3d 126 (3d Cir. 2019) – Bankruptcy court may decide core and “related to” issues in plan confirmation without a separate report.
- In re Combustion Engineering, 391 F.3d 190 (3d Cir. 2004) – Good-faith purchaser and § 363 “sale” authority; plan confirmation good-faith (§ 1129(a)(3)).
Legal Reasoning
- “Related to” Jurisdiction. Because BSA’s insurance-policy buy-backs would reduce shared insurance coverage dollar-for-dollar, and because indemnity agreements could trigger BSA’s obligations, a successful third-party claim “could conceivably affect” BSA’s estate. Thus the bankruptcy court lawfully included those claims in plan confirmation.
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Statutory Mootness (§ 363(m)).
- Section 363(m) protects unstayed § 363(b) sales to good-faith purchasers from reversal on appeal when the requested relief would “affect the validity of the sale.”
- The Confirmatory Order authorized plan-related buy-backs “pursuant to § 363.” The Settling Insurers paid for those policies, were found to be good-faith purchasers, and the buy-backs were not stayed.
- The Lujan and Dumas & Vaughn claimants asked for wholesale reversal of those buy-backs, which would “materially increase or decrease the purchase price” and thus violate § 363(m). The Court therefore dismissed their appeals as statutorily moot.
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Equitable Mootness.
- Equitable mootness can bar appeals where plan confirmation is “substantially consummated” and relief would “fatally scramble” the plan or harm third parties who justifiably relied on confirmation.
- The plan’s funding transfers, assumption of BSA’s operations, and commencement of distributions met the “substantial consummation” test.
- But the insurers’ limited requests (minor plan edits and a modified judgment-reduction clause) would not unravel the trust or undermine distributions already made to claimants. Their appeals therefore proceeded on the merits.
- Claims of the Certain Insurers. They sought explicit plan language to preserve policy defenses and priority rights. The Court held that the plan and confirmation order already protected those rights under “applicable law,” so no amendment was needed. The debtors had proposed their plan in good faith.
- Claims of the Allianz Insurers. They argued that the trust’s “judgment-reduction” clause extinguished their right to recover excess defense and contribution expenses from the Settling Insurers. Invoking the “one-satisfaction” principle and Purdue’s logic, the Court found that clause inadequate and directed amendment so that Allianz can recoup its excess costs from the trust when no offsetting trust-held judgment exists.
Impact
This decision clarifies that:
- § 363(m) extends to sales authorized in plan confirmation orders, shielding unstayed § 363(b) transactions from reversal—even when the sale is embedded in a confirmed plan.
- Non-consensual third-party releases in approved plans cannot be unraveled on appeal if they formed consideration for a § 363(b) sale—absent a pre-appeal stay.
- Claimants seeking to void such releases must act early (e.g., secure a stay of consummation or propose relief that leaves the sale intact).
- Equitable mootness remains a narrow, discretionary doctrine, but it will not defeat carefully tailored challenges by non-settling insurers.
- Insurers can preserve out-of-bankruptcy coverage and contribution rights, but plan language must be watertight—especially around judgment-reduction mechanics.
Complex Concepts Simplified
- § 363(b) Sale
- A debtor can sell estate property “outside the ordinary course of business” with court approval.
- § 363(m) Statutory Mootness
- If a court authorizes a sale under § 363(b), and a buyer pays fair value in good faith, then an unstayed appeal that would undo that sale is barred—even if the buyer knew of the appeal.
- Equitable Mootness
- A bankruptcy court’s confirmation order may become so “substantially consummated” that an appellate court will not fashion relief if undoing it would “fatally scramble” the plan or harm innocent third parties.
- Non-Consensual Third-Party Releases
- Provisions in a chapter 11 plan that release claims against non-debtors without those parties’ consent. Recently held in Purdue to exceed the Bankruptcy Code’s plan powers.
- Good-Faith Purchaser
- A buyer who pays fair value and does not collude, commit fraud, or take unconscionable advantage of the estate or other bidders.
- Judgment-Reduction Clause
- A contractual mechanism where an insurer’s liability to a trust is reduced by the amount that a separate insurer is found liable to reimburse, preventing “double recovery.”
Conclusion
In re Boy Scouts reaffirms the power of § 363(m) to bar appellate challenges to untimely, unstayed reversals of court-approved § 363(b) sales—even when embedded in confirmed plans. The decision underscores the need for claimants to act quickly (and obtain stays) if they wish to avoid non-consensual releases tied to policy buy-backs. At the same time, narrowly tailored insurer challenges can survive both equitable and statutory mootness when they seek amendments that do not unravel the plan’s core funding transactions. Finally, the Court’s adjustment of the judgment-reduction clause for the Allianz Insurers illustrates how courts will police plan mechanics to ensure that insurers’ out-of-bankruptcy rights remain intact.
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