Legal Research AI

Monarch Life Insurance v. Ropes & Gray

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1995-09-13
Citations: 65 F.3d 973
Copy Citations
85 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
November 22, 1995 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                           
                                                     

No. 94-2173

             MONARCH LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, ET AL.,

                           Appellants,

                                v.

                          ROPES & GRAY,

                            Appellee.

                                           
                                                     

No. 94-2200

             MONARCH LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, ET AL.,

                            Appellees,

                                v.

                          ROPES & GRAY,

                            Appellant.

                                           
                                                     

                           ERRATA SHEET

   The  opinion of this Court, issued September 13, 1995, is amended
as follows:

   p.9,  1, l.14:  "(Bankr. D.D.C. 1992))."  in place of "(Bankr. D.
Colo. 1992))."


                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                           
                                                     

No. 94-2173

             MONARCH LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, ET AL.,

                           Appellants,

                                v.

                          ROPES & GRAY,

                            Appellee.

                                           
                                                     

No. 94-2200

             MONARCH LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, ET AL.,

                            Appellees,

                                v.

                          ROPES & GRAY,

                            Appellant.

                                           
                                                     

          APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

       [Hon. Frank H. Freedman, Senior U.S. District Judge]
                                                                    

                                           
                                                     

                     Torruella, Chief Judge,
                                                     

                  Cyr and Stahl, Circuit Judges.
                                                         

                                           
                                                     


                                3


   Bruce E. Baty,  with whom  Christopher D.  Schneider, Morrison  &
                                                                              
Hecker, Charles K. Bergin, Jr., and Robinson, Donovan, Madden & Barry,
                                                                              
P.C. were on brief for Monarch Life Insurance Company.
            
   John  K. Villa, with whom  Nicole K. Seligman,  Philip J. Deutch,
                                                                             
Williams  & Connolly, Charles S.  Cohen and Egan,  Flanagan and Cohen,
                                                                              
P.C. were on brief for Ropes & Gray.
            

                                           
                                                     

                        September 13, 1995
                                           
                                                     

                                2


          CYR,   Circuit  Judge.     Following   an  unsuccessful
                    CYR,   Circuit  Judge.
                                         

intermediate appeal to the district court, Monarch Life Insurance

Co. ("Monarch  Life")  continues  to  press its  challenge  to  a

bankruptcy  court  order enjoining  its  prosecution  of a  legal

malpractice action  in Massachusetts Superior  Court against  its

former counsel,  the law firm  of Ropes &  Gray.   The bankruptcy

court  determined  that  the   Monarch  Life  action  violated  a

permanent injunction incorporated in the confirmed reorganization

plan  of  its  parent corporation,  Monarch  Capital  Corporation

("Monarch Capital").   We now  affirm the district  court on  the

ground that Monarch Life  is collaterally estopped from asserting

a state court challenge to the bankruptcy court's jurisdiction to

enter  the  permanent injunction  incorporated  in the  confirmed

reorganization plan.  

                                I
                                          I

                            BACKGROUND
                                      BACKGROUND
                                                

          Monarch Capital, incorporated as  a holding company  in

1968,  marketed life  and  disability  insurance through  Monarch

Life, its  wholly-owned Massachusetts subsidiary,1  and developed

real estate  through another group of  subsidiaries ("real estate

subsidiaries").    Ropes  &  Gray  provided   simultaneous  legal

representation to Monarch Capital and its subsidiaries, including

Monarch Life.  In 1985, Monarch Capital established a  Short-Term

                    
                              

     1For  simplicity sake,  "Monarch  Life" includes  appellants
Springfield  Life  Insurance  Company  and  First  Variable  Life
Insurance Company.  

                                3


Investment  Pool  ("STIP"),  a  common bank  account  into  which

Monarch Capital's  subsidiaries agreed to make  daily deposits of

their  excess  cash  balances.   The  STIP  agreement  authorized

Monarch  Capital to  borrow  needed funds  from  the STIP  at  an

interest rate more favorable than the market  rate, and permitted

the subsidiaries to recoup their STIP deposits on demand.

          Beginning   in  1987,  Monarch  Capital's  real  estate

subsidiaries began experiencing serious cash flow problems due to

an abrupt economy-wide decline  in real estate values.   In order

to prop up its failing real estate subsidiaries, Monarch  Capital

began to  borrow heavily  from the  STIP deposits  contributed by

Monarch  Life.     By  1990,  Monarch   Life's  outstanding  STIP

"advances" to  Monarch Capital  approximated $175 million.   When

Monarch Life learned the  extent of Monarch Capital's borrowings,

it unilaterally cancelled its participation in the STIP.  Shortly

thereafter, Monarch Life discharged Ropes &  Gray as its counsel.

During  that same  year, Monarch  Capital borrowed  an additional

$235 million from a group of financial institutions (hereinafter:

"the 235 Banks"), pledging  its capital stock in Monarch  Life as

collateral for the loan.          

          In May  1991, the Massachusetts  Insurance Commissioner

placed  Monarch Life in receivership.  The receiver in turn filed

an  involuntary  chapter  11 petition  against  Monarch  Capital.

After  seven months  of negotiation,  the principal  creditors of

Monarch Capital    the 235  Banks and Monarch Life    proposed  a

plan  of reorganization  ("Plan"), which  purported to  settle or

                                4


release a tangle of "complex" claims and cross-claims held by and

against Monarch  Capital, its subsidiaries, and  other creditors.

In  re Monarch  Capital Corp.,  No. 91-41379-JFQ,  slip op.  at 9
                                       

(Bankr.  D. Mass. June 25, 1992).2  These included Monarch Life's

claim that Monarch Capital, acting in concert with the 235 Banks,

had used  the STIP  to deplete  Monarch  Life's coffers,  thereby

placing   Monarch  Life   in   violation   of   state   insurance

regulations.3   In  consideration  of their  mutual agreement  to

release claims  and to make  financial contributions to  fund the

Plan,  the  Plan  proponents  insisted  on  the  inclusion  of  a

permanent injunction to protect them from future lawsuits arising

from or related to claims settled under the Plan.  

          The  injunction  ultimately   included  in  the   order

confirming the Plan provides as follows:  

          In  addition  to  the discharge  provided  by
          Section 1141  of the Bankruptcy  Code and  to
          supplement   the   discharge  provisions   of
          Article   VI.A  of   the  Plan,   this  Order
          constitutes an injunction against all persons
                                                                 
          (other than the FDIC as Receiver) from taking
          any  of the following  actions (other than an
                    
                              

     2Ropes & Gray was scheduled as a creditor  in the chapter 11
proceeding, but asserted no claim against Monarch Capital. 

     3The  Plan  also  provided,  inter alia,  that  (1)  Monarch
                                                      
Capital  would separate its  insurance business (thereby creating
the "Life Group") from its real estate business (thereby creating
the  "New Realty  Group"); and  (2) the  235 Banks  would release
their guaranty  claims against Monarch Capital's  subsidiaries in
connection  with the 1990 loan  to Monarch Capital,  and agree to
share  the Monarch Life capital  stock which had  been pledged as
collateral  for the  1990 loan  with Monarch  Capital's unsecured
creditors.  Upon confirmation of  the Plan in June 1992, the  235
Banks  became  Monarch  Life's  "parent"  by  acquiring  a  clear
majority of  Monarch Life  stock, and Monarch  Life emerged  from
receivership.

                                5


          action   brought  to  enforce  any  right  or
          obligation under  the Plan or  the Settlement
          Agreement):  

               a. commencement or  continuation of  any
                                                                 
               action  or  proceeding  arising from  or
                                                                 
               related  to  a  claim  against  [Monarch
                                                       
               Capital] against or  affecting or  [sic]
               any  property  of [Monarch  Capital], or
               any direct or indirect transferee of any
               property  of,  or  direct   or  indirect
               successor in  interest  to, any  of  the
               foregoing . . . ; and  
                                              

               b. commencement or  continuation of  any
                                                                 
               action  or  proceeding  arising from  or
                                                                 
               related to a claim against the Debtor of
                                                              
               this Chapter 11 case, the [Monarch Life]
               Receivership  or  the operations  of the
               Debtor against  or affecting any  of New
               Holding  Co.,  New Realty  Co., [Monarch
               Life],  the  Agent, the  235  Banks, the
               Trustee,  the  Creditors' Committee  (in
               such   capacity),  the   [Monarch  Life]
               Receiver and  their respective officers,
                                                       
               directors, employees, attorneys, agents,
                                                        
               successors  and  assigns  other  than  a
               claim to enforce  obligations under  the
               Plan or  the Settlement Agreement .  . .
               .4  

Id. at 19-20 (emphasis added).   
             

          After  a   hearing,  at  which  the  parties  discussed

whether, and to what extent,  Bankruptcy Code   105(a)5  empowers

a bankruptcy  court to  afford permanent injunctive  relief which

effectively  grants  a  "discharge"  to parties  other  than  the
                                                                           

chapter  11  debtor, the  bankruptcy  court  confirmed the  Plan,
                             

                    
                              

     4Subparagraphs (a) and (b)  each list specific exceptions to
the coverage of the injunction; none are material to this appeal.

     5Section 105(a) provides in  relevant part:  "The  court may
issue any  order,  process,  or  judgment that  is  necessary  or
appropriate  to  carry out  the provisions  of  this title."   11
U.S.C.   105(a).

                                6


including  the proposed injunction.   See id. at  23-27; see also
                                                                           

infra Appendix  at pp.  i-iii (containing relevant  excerpts from
               

confirmation  order).   The  bankruptcy court  found that  absent

prompt confirmation  of a  chapter 11  plan, Monarch Life  likely

would be forced into  liquidation.  In re Monarch  Capital Corp.,
                                                                          

No.  91-41379-JFQ,  slip  op. at  18.    Monarch  Life's receiver

elected not to appeal the confirmation order.

          Monarch  Life  soon  discovered   documentary  evidence

allegedly   establishing  that   Ropes   &  Gray   simultaneously

represented   both   Monarch   Capital   and  Monarch   Life   in

circumstances  which suggested an  inherent conflict of interest.

In May 1993, Monarch Life brought suit in  Massachusetts Superior

Court, seeking  compensatory damages  for Ropes &  Gray's alleged

participation  in  Monarch  Capital's  private  strategy  to  use

Monarch Life's  STIP contributions  to prop up  Monarch Capital's

moribund real  estate investments.   Monarch Life  alleged, inter
                                                                           

alia,  that Monarch  Capital  and Ropes  &  Gray, in  reports  to
              

Massachusetts  insurance  regulators, deliberately  concealed the

nature  and  understated the  amount  of the  STIP  "advances" to

Monarch Capital, thereby exposing  Monarch Life and its directors

to civil liability for  Monarch Life's violation of Massachusetts

insurance  laws which  require that  insurance companies  keep on

hand minimum "admitted assets" to cover extant policies.  Monarch

Life further alleged that Ropes & Gray had deliberately concealed

from Monarch Life the ongoing use of the  STIP by Monarch Capital

to finance its  long-term real  estate ventures, as  well as  the

                                7


fact  that  Monarch Capital  had  no realistic  prospect  of ever

repaying its STIP "advances" had Monarch Life made demand.6

          Ropes & Gray filed a motion for civil  contempt against

Monarch Life  in the  bankruptcy court,  claiming that its  state

court action  violated the injunctive provision  in the confirmed

Monarch  Capital chapter  11 plan.   Following  a hearing  on the

contempt  motion, the  bankruptcy court  determined that  (1) the

Monarch  Life  action  was barred  by  the  broad  terms of  both

subparagraphs (a) and (b) of the injunction included in the Plan,

see supra p.  6; and (2) the  doctrine of res  judicata precluded
                                                                 

Monarch Life from attacking the bankruptcy court's "jurisdiction"

to enter the  broad-based injunction.   Ropes &  Gray v.  Monarch
                                                                           

Life Ins. Co. (In re Monarch Capital Corp.), No. 91-41379-JFQ, at
                                                    

6-7 (Bankr. D. Mass. Oct.  15, 1993).  The bankruptcy court  held

Monarch Life  in civil contempt  but refused to  impose sanctions

because the terms  of the injunctive  provision in the  confirmed

Plan  were not "sufficiently  specific and definite"  to permit a

finding that the  violation had been deliberate  or undertaken in

bad faith.  Id. at 7.  On intermediate appeal, the district court
                         

affirmed  the bankruptcy court decision.  Ropes & Gray v. Monarch
                                                                           

Life  Ins. Co.  (In re  Monarch Capital  Corp.), 173 B.R.  31 (D.
                                                        

                    
                              

     6Ropes  & Gray responded  that (1)  Monarch Capital,  as the
parent of Monarch Life, had the unfettered legal right to use its
subsidiaries'  assets  as it  wished; (2)  Ropes  & Gray  had not
learned  of the  STIP  advances until  1989,  by which  time  the
outstanding balances  were already significant; and  (3) in order
to  protect Monarch Life's interests,  Ropes & Gray  at that time
advised  Monarch  Capital not  to  "borrow"  any additional  STIP
funds.

                                8


Mass. 1994).7

                                II
                                          II

                            DISCUSSION
                                      DISCUSSION
                                                

          Monarch Life  contends, as  a matter  of law,  that the
                                                                

permanent  injunctive provision  included in  the confirmed  Plan

cannot extinguish actions  against third parties such  as Ropes &

Gray, since bankruptcy courts have no "jurisdiction" or  power to
                                                                        

"discharge"  (1) debts other than those of the chapter 11 debtor,

see  Brief for  Appellants at  12-16   (citing Bankruptcy  Code  
             

524(e), 11 U.S.C.   524(e) ("[D]ischarge  of a debt of the debtor

does not  affect the liability  of any  other entity  on, or  the

property  of  any  other   entity  for,  such  debt.");  American
                                                                           

Hardwoods,  Inc.  v.  Deutsche   Credit  Corp.  (In  re  American
                                                                           

Hardwoods,  Inc.), 885  F.2d 621,  626 (9th  Cir. 1989)),  or (2)
                          

debts of any nondebtor such as Ropes & Gray which concededly made

no financial contribution to  the Plan, see id. at  16-20 (citing
                                                         

In  re Heron,  Burchett, Ruckert  & Rothwell,  148 B.R.  665, 687
                                                      

                    
                              

     7The district  court relied  on slightly  different grounds.
First,  it determined  that  it would  be  unfair to  invoke  res
                                                                           
judicata against  Monarch Life, which honestly  believed that the
                  
injunctive provision was not broad enough to bar  actions against
parties like Ropes &  Gray.  Id. at 40-41.  The  court also ruled
                                          
that  subparagraph (b) was inapposite because Ropes & Gray was no
longer Monarch Life's "attorney" at  the time of the confirmation
hearing.  Id. at 43-44.  Nevertheless, it concluded that subpara-
                       
graph  (a)  of the  injunction was  broad  enough to  bar Monarch
Life's state court action  against Ropes & Gray.   Id. at  44-45.
                                                                
The  district  court thereupon  vacated  the  order of  contempt,
inasmuch as the lack  of clarity in the injunctive  provision not
only  made   sanctions  unwarranted   but  also   undermined  the
bankruptcy  court's threshold  finding  that Monarch  Life was  a
contemnor.  Id. at 46.
                         

                                9


(Bankr. D.D.C. 1992)).  

          Ropes  & Gray  counters  that Monarch  Life is  barred,

under  the doctrines of res judicata  and judicial estoppel, from
                                              

litigating  the scope of the  bankruptcy court's power because it

not only knowingly failed to appeal from the order confirming the

chapter 11 Plan, but in its announced role as a Plan proponent it
                                                                        

acquiesced in  its co-proponents'  arguments that the  bankruptcy
                    

court possessed  broad injunctive powers under  Bankruptcy Code  

105(a).  See Stoll v. Gottlieb, 305 U.S. 165, 172  (1938) (unless
                                        

a party in interest  objects, and appeals an erroneous  ruling by

the bankruptcy court that it  had "jurisdiction" to confirm terms

of  plan, the  ruling is  conclusive in  subsequent proceedings);

Republic  Supply Co. v. Shoaf,  815 F.2d 1046,  1052-53 (5th Cir.
                                       

1987) (same); cf. Celotex Corp. v. Edwards, 115 S. Ct. 1493, 1499
                                                    

(1995)  (if bankruptcy  court  determines that  it possesses  so-

called "related to" jurisdiction  to enjoin under Code    105(a),

and the jurisdictional  question remains open for  determination,

aggrieved litigant's recourse is  by appeal from bankruptcy court

decision, not  by collateral  attack on bankruptcy  court order);

cf.  also Maggio  v.  Zeitz, 333  U.S.  56, 69  (1948)  (contempt
                                     

proceeding is not appropriate  vehicle for attacking validity, or

retrying  the  merits,  of   the  order  contravened  by  alleged

contemnor).

A.  Standards of Review 
          A.  Standards of Review
                                 

          Although   the  conclusions  of   law  reached  by  the

bankruptcy  court and the district  court are subject  to de novo
                                                                           

                                10


review, the  underlying findings of fact by  the bankruptcy court

are reviewed only for  clear error.  Western  Auto Supply Co.  v.
                                                                       

Savage Arms, Inc. (In re Savage Indus., Inc.),  43 F.3d 714, 719-
                                                      

20, n. 8 (1st Cir. 1994); In re G.S.F. Corp., 938 F.2d 1467, 1474
                                                      

(1st  Cir.  1991).    The  applicability  vel non  of  preclusion
                                                           

principles  is a question of law.   See, e.g., Gonzalez v. Abreu,
                                                                          

27 F.3d 751, 755 (1st Cir. 1994).  Since the  judgment (viz., the

order  confirming the Plan) was rendered by a federal tribunal   

the bankruptcy  court      see FDIC v.  Shearson-American Express
                                                                           

Inc.,  996  F.2d  493,  497  (1st  Cir.  1993)  (bankruptcy court
              

decisions trigger normal res judicata principles) (citing Katchen
                                                                           

v.  Landy, 382 U.S.  323, 334 (1966)),  cert. denied, 114  S. Ct.
                                                              

1054  (1994); see  also, e.g.,  Stoll, 305  U.S. at  170 (finding
                                               

bankruptcy court order confirming reorganization plan entitled to

res judicata effect);  Eubanks v.  FDIC, 977 F.2d  166, 170  (5th
                                                 

Cir. 1992)  (similar), federal preclusion principles  apply.  See
                                                                           

Blonder-Tongue  Lab., Inc. v. University of Ill. Found., 402 U.S.
                                                                 

313, 324-25 (1971); Recoveredge L.P.  v. Pentecost, 44 F.3d 1284,
                                                            

1290 (5th Cir. 1995); Orijas v. Louisiana-Pacific Corp., 31  F.3d
                                                                 

995, 1010 (10th  Cir. 1993); Restatement (Second)  of Judgments  
                                                                         

87.   In order to invoke  collateral estoppel (issue preclusion),

Ropes  &  Gray must  demonstrate  that:  (1)  both  the  contempt

proceedings and  the confirmation  proceedings involved  the same
                                                                           

issue  of law  or fact;  (2) the  parties actually  litigated the
                                                                       

issue in  the confirmation proceedings; (3)  the bankruptcy court

actually resolved  the  issue in  a  final and  binding  judgment
                           

                                11


(viz., its confirmation  order); and (4)  its resolution of  that

issue  of  law  or fact  was  essential  to  its judgment  (i.e.,
                                                 

necessary to its holding).   See Grella v. Salem Five Cents  Sav.
                                                                           

Bank, 42 F.3d 26, 30 (1st Cir. 1994); Piccicuto v. Dwyer, 39 F.3d
                                                                  

37,40 (1stCir. 1994);Restatement (Second)of Judgments  27(1982).8
                                                               

B.  Merits of Issue Preclusion Claim
          B.  Merits of Issue Preclusion Claim
                                              
                    
                              

     8Monarch  Life argues that Ropes  & Gray cannot  rely on res
                                                                           
judicata principles  because it  filed no chapter  11 claim  and,
                  
therefore,  was  not a  "party"  to the  chapter  11 confirmation
proceedings.   See, e.g.,  Apparel Art  Int'l v.  Amertex Enters.
                                                                           
Ltd., 48 F.3d 576, 583 (1st Cir. 1995) (claim preclusion normally
              
requires  "identicality  of  parties,"  or   at  least  privity).
Frequently, however, "res judicata"  is used more inclusively, to
                                            
refer  either  to claim  preclusion  or  issue preclusion  (i.e.,
                                                                   
collateral  estoppel).  See Grella, 42 F.3d at 30-31 (noting that
                                            
basis for  bankruptcy court  decision was unclear,  and observing
that  labels    "res  judicata" and "collateral  estoppel"    are
                                        
less important than substance  of parties' argumentation in light
of factual  circumstances) (citing  Dennis v. Rhode  Island Hosp.
                                                                           
Trust,  744  F.2d  893,  898  (1st  Cir.  1984));  Railway  Labor
                                                                           
Executives' Ass'n  v. Guilford Transp. Indus., Inc.,  989 F.2d 9,
                                                             
11  n.3 (1st  Cir. 1993)  (noting confusion prevailing  over same
labels); see also Fiumara  v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Cos.,  746 F.2d
                                                                
87, 90 n.1 (1st Cir. 1984)  (noting "distinct family resemblance"
                                      
between  two doctrines).  Since Monarch  Life seeks to relitigate
only one  component "issue"  arising from the  confirmation order
(viz.,  the  bankruptcy court's  jurisdiction  or  power under   
105(a)),  the preclusion defense asserted by Ropes & Gray is more
exactly    characterized    as   collateral    estoppel   ("issue
preclusion").  
     A  party invoking issue preclusion need not show that it was
privy  to  the first  proceeding.   See  Parklane Hosiery  Co. v.
                                                                        
Shore, 439 U.S.  322, 326-28  (1979) (no  "mutuality of  parties"
               
rule); Blonder-Tongue Lab., 402 U.S. at 328 (same);  Fiumara, 746
                                                                      
F.2d  at 92; cf. DiPinto v. Sperling, 9 F.3d 2, 4 (1st Cir. 1993)
                                              
(Rhode Island law).   It need only  show that "the party  against
                                                                           
whom issue preclusion will  be applied had a fair  opportunity to
                                                
litigate  the issue fully."  Kyricopoulos v. Town of Orleans, 967
                                                                      
F.2d  14, 16  (1st Cir. 1992)  (Massachusetts law  dispenses with
"mutuality"  rule) (emphasis  added).   Of  course,  even if  the
bankruptcy  court   had  based  its  contempt   ruling  on  claim
preclusion,  we  would have  been free  to  affirm on  any ground
supported by  the bankruptcy court  record.  See  La Electronica,
                                                                           
Inc. v. Capo-Roman (In  re Electronica, Inc.), 995 F.2d  320, 321
                                                      
n.1 (1st Cir. 1993).

                                12


     1.   "Same Issue" 
               1.   "Same Issue" 
                               

          We must  first identify the precise  issue Monarch Life

sought  to "relitigate"  in  its defense  against Ropes  & Gray's

motion for civil contempt.   We have held that  Bankruptcy Code  

105(a)  confers ample power  upon the bankruptcy  court to enjoin

the  initiation  or continuation  of  judicial  proceedings in  a

nonbankruptcy forum  against nondebtors during the  pendency of a

chapter 11 case,  where the court reasonably concludes  that such

actions  would  entail  or   threaten  adverse  "impact"  on  the

administration of the chapter 11 estate.  See In re G.S.F. Corp.,
                                                                          

938 F.2d at 1474.  These injunctions  serve simply as adjuncts to

the  automatic   stay,  see  Bankruptcy  Code      362(a),  which
                                     

ostensibly  protects  only  the  debtor  and  its  property  from
                                    

creditor "grab-law"  tactics after the "race  to the courthouse."
                                            

See  Austin v. Unarco Indus.,  Inc., 705 F.2d  1, 4-5 (1st Cir.),
                                             

cert.  dismissed, 463 U.S. 1247 (1983).  Since the automatic stay
                          

may induce creditors  to refocus their recovery efforts  upon the

chapter  11  debtor's  co-obligors,  a  temporary  injunction  is

sometimes  needed  to  protect  nondebtors  (e.g.,  a   corporate

debtor's principals and managing  officers) whose time and energy

should not be diverted  to collateral lawsuits and away  from the

effort to reorganize the debtor.  Like the automatic stay itself,

see  Bankruptcy   Code     362(c),  however,   these  accessorial
             

injunctions  normally  lapse       at  the  latest      following

confirmation  of the  chapter  11 plan  and  the closing  of  the

chapter  11 case,  leaving  the nondebtor  co-obligor once  again

                                13


exposed  to  pursuit  by   the  discharged  chapter  11  debtor's

creditors.  

          The more intricate  "jurisdictional" question raised by

the  confirmation order and contempt  proceedings in this case is

whether  Congress  intended an  outer  temporal  boundary on  the

availability of injunctive relief under Bankruptcy Code   105(a).

Since  the  chapter  11 debtor  is  the  only entity  permanently
                                                                           

discharged upon confirmation of a chapter 11 plan, id.   1141(d),
                                                                

its creditors usually  are free to pursue  all available remedies

against those undischarged  entities which were obligated,  along

with  the chapter 11  debtor, on a  prepetition debt.   See id.  
                                                                         

524(e) ("[D]ischarge of a debt of the debtor does not affect  the

liability of any other  entity on, or the  property of any  other

entity  for, such debt.").   Whether  the Code  likewise empowers

bankruptcy   courts   to   enter  permanent   injunctions   which
                                                                   

effectively confer  de facto "discharge" relief  upon the chapter
                                      

11 debtor's  co-obligors, and  if so, under  what conditions  and

limitations, are the topics of continuing debate and disagreement

in both case law and commentary.   See, e.g., Howard C. Buschmann
                                                      

III & Sean P. Madden, The Power and Propriety of Bankruptcy Court
                                                                           

Intervention  in Actions  Between  Nondebtors,  47  The  Business
                                                       

Lawyer 913 (1992). 

          The  case law splits  along two principal  lines.  Some

courts hold  that section  105(a) does  not  permit a  bankruptcy

court  permanently to  enjoin post-confirmation  lawsuits against

nondebtors,  since such  an order  would directly  contravene the

                                14


"more  specific"  proscription in  section  524(e).   See,  e.g.,
                                                                          

AmericanHardwoods, 885F.2d at626; LandsingDiversified Properties-
                                                                           

 II v.  First Nat'l Bank &  Trust Co. (In re  Western Real Estate
                                                                           

Fund, Inc.), 922 F.2d  592, 600-01 (10th Cir. 1990),  modified on
                                                                           

other grounds, 932  F.2d 898 (10th Cir. 1991).   The factual cir-
                       

cumstances in  these cases  did not  suggest,  however, that  the

grant  of  injunctive relief  was in  any  sense integral  to the

success  of   the  chapter  11  reorganization.     See  American
                                                                           

Hardwoods, 885 F.2d at 626  (noting no "unusual facts" warranting
                   

permanent "discharge" of debtor's loan guarantor). 

          The  second  line of  cases  note  that section  524(e)

cannot be construed as an absolute or per se proscription against
                                                      

permanent injunctive relief for all nondebtors.  See, e.g., In re
                                                                           

Heron, Burchette, 148 B.R. at 687 (noting that   524(e) "contains
                          

no language of prohibition  and [thus] should not be  interpreted
                                    

to  limit court's power under   105(a)") (emphasis added).  These

courts  have formulated  various  tests for  determining when  de
                                                                           

facto  "discharges" would not be ultra vires.  See, e.g., Menard-
                                                                           

Sanford v. Mabey (In re A.H. Robins Co.), 880 F.2d  694, 702 (4th
                                                 

Cir.),  cert. denied, 493 U.S. 959 (1989), cited with approval in
                                                                           

In re G.S.F.  Corp., 938 F.2d at  1474-75; In re  Master Mortgage
                                                                           

Inv. Fund, 168 B.R.  930, 935 (Bankr. W.D. Mo.  1994) (collecting
                   

cases).   In extraordinary circumstances, it has been held that a

bankruptcy court can grant permanent  injunctive relief essential

to enable  the formulation  and confirmation of  a reorganization

plan if,  for example, nondebtors who  would otherwise contribute

                                15


to  funding the plan will  not settle their  mutual claims absent

"protection"  from  potential post-confirmation  lawsuits arising

from their  prepetition relationship with the  chapter 11 debtor.

See, e.g., In re A.H. Robins Co., 880  F.2d at 702.  These courts
                                          

have  taken into  consideration  whether (1)  the creditors  have

overwhelmingly approved  the plan,  with the injunction;  (2) the

plan contemplates full  payment of all  creditor claims; and  (3)

the  injunction   would  affect  a  relatively   small  class  of

claimants.  Id. at 698, 700-702; In re Master Mortgage,  168 B.R.
                                                                

at 935.

          In this second line of  cases, the courts have ascribed

importance  to  the  fact   that  the  cooperation  of  essential

"contributing"  parties may  not  have been  forthcoming, and  no

chapter 11 plan may have  been practicable, absent an  injunctive

provision   affording   so-called   incidental  "protection"   to
                                                        

nondebtors  who  do  not intend  to  contribute  directly to  the
                                  

chapter  11 plan.   For  example,  if a  non-"contributing" party

holds  an  indirect  claim  against  a   would-be  "contributing"

party,9  such  as  a  contingent  claim  for  indemnification  or

contribution, the potential  "contributing" party may  decline to

accept, or  contribute to, the  chapter 11 plan  in circumstances

                    
                              

     9Ropes  &  Gray  argues  that it  "contributed"  to  Monarch
Capital's chapter 11 plan to the extent it held contingent claims
for  indemnification  or  contribution against  Monarch  Capital,
which  it  effectively "released"  by  refraining  from filing  a
claim.   See supra  note 2.   For present  purposes, however, the
                            
term  "contributing" parties is used to  refer to those entities,
such as the 235 Banks and Monarch Life, which proposed and signed
onto the Plan.

                                16


where the non-"contributing" party remains free to implead him as

a third-party defendant  in a post-confirmation lawsuit.   See In
                                                                           

re  A.H. Robins, 880  F.2d at 702.   In such circumstances, these
                         

courts have  afforded the "incidental protection"  of a permanent

injunction   by   enjoining   "direct"   actions    against   the
                                                                           

noncontributor in order to  protect the contributor from exposure
                        

to indirect liability.

     2.   Actual Litigation
               2.   Actual Litigation
                                     

          Monarch Life  represents that it had  no inkling during

the confirmation  proceedings that any party  was contending that

section 105(a) enabled  the bankruptcy court to  grant the broad-

based  "incidental"  injunctive  relief  required  to  protect  a

"noncontributing"  party such as Ropes  & Gray.   In a memorandum

submitted prior to confirmation by the 235 Banks, however, it was
                                         

plainly stated that    

          the Injunction must  by necessity extend  not
          only  to parties  like the  235 Banks  or the
          [Monarch Life] Receiver  who are  signatories
          to,  and gave actual consideration under, the
          Settlement  Agreement,  but  also   to  those
          nonsignatory  parties  such  as officers  and
          directors of  those parties  .  . .  .   That
          consideration  will  be seriously  diminished
          and  the  releases  granted  the  signatories
          worthless if the nonsignatories  can continue
          to be  sued, since certain  signatory parties
          would be directly or indirectly liable to the
                                                                 
          parties  being  sued.   Consequently, actions
                                        
          against   the   nonsignatories  will   be  as
          destructive  to  the  settlement  as  actions
          against the signatories.

(Emphasis added.)   The 235 Banks  memorandum repeatedly adverted

to the problem posed  for both "signatories" and "nonsignatories"

unless  the latter were insulated    by injunctive relief    from

                                17


post-confirmation  lawsuits.    Moreover,  it  prominently  cited

cases, such as A.H. Robins, supra, involving "incidental" injunc-
                                           

tive  relief for  noncontributing  nondebtors holding  contingent

claims for indemnification or contribution.

          Monarch Life  argues, nonetheless, that  the 235  Banks

memorandum does not establish  that the section 105(a) issue  was

"actually  litigated,"  within  the  meaning  of  the  collateral

estoppel doctrine, since the memorandum was not signed by Monarch

Life  and therefore merely represented the 235 Banks' view of the

applicable law.  We do not agree.  

          First, the  235 Banks and  Monarch Life     through its

receiver    held themselves forth in the confirmation proceedings

as joint Plan  proponents, frequently sharing  responsibility for
                  

presenting the merits of discrete portions of the Plan before the

bankruptcy court.   See  also supra  note  3.   Monarch Life  may
                                             

disagree with the litigation  stance taken by its  receiver prior

to confirmation  of the Plan,  but it does  not contend  that the

receiver could not bind it for issue preclusion purposes.  

          Second, there is no reason to suppose that Monarch Life

itself did not expect to benefit    nor indeed that it has not in

fact benefited    from the protection afforded in response to the

235 Banks'  invitation to confer the  broadest available "incide-

ntal"  protection,  upon  all  noncontributing  co-obligors, from

future  lawsuits "arising  from  or related  to  a claim  against

[Monarch Capital] or affecting or [sic]  any property of [Monarch

Capital]."   Thus,  we cannot  simply  assume that  no  protected

                                18


noncontributor  held an  indirect  claim  for indemnification  or

contribution against Monarch Life.  
                                           

          Third,  even if  Monarch  Life had  not yet  discovered

specific grounds for its asserted cause of action against Ropes &

Gray relating to Monarch  Capital's abuse of the STIP,  it cannot

plausibly  contend that  Ropes &  Gray's alleged  involvement, as

Monarch Capital's counsel during the relevant time period, was so

far removed from  Monarch Life's contemplation that it  could not

have  weighed  the strategic  advantages  and  risks involved  in

advocating "incidental" injunctive  relief prior to  confirmation

of the Plan.  See,  e.g., DeCosta v. Viacom Int'l Inc.,  981 F.2d
                                                                

602, 605-06, 610  (1st Cir. 1992) (court may  decide not to apply

collateral estoppel  where there has been  a "significant" change

in  the law or factual circumstances since the first judgment was

entered; and finding no such "significant change"), cert. denied,
                                                                          

113 S. Ct.  3039 (1993).   Moreover,  changed circumstances  will

preclude  the application  of  collateral estoppel  only if  they

might  have  altered the  decision the  court  made in  the first
                              

proceeding.   See  Montana v.  United States,  440 U.S.  147, 159
                                                      

(1979); EEOC v.  American Airlines,  48 F.3d 164,  167 (5th  Cir.
                                            

1995).  And, Monarch Life cannot establish that it would not have

proposed  precisely the  same  injunction, whereby  it agreed  to

release a number of viable causes of action against third parties

"arising  from" claims  against Monarch  Capital, even if  it had

known the particulars  of its malpractice  claim against Ropes  &

Gray in  June 1992.  Cf. Fiumara v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Cos., 746
                                                                      

                                19


F.2d 87, 91-92 (1st  Cir. 1984) (noting  that "all of the  events

which define  the [subsequent] federal complaint  occurred in the

period before the [first proceeding] and were at  least generally

hinted  at during  that  trial," and  "[i]f  they were  not  then

litigated as  hotly  as plaintiff  would now  wish, they  plainly

could have been").

          Finally,  and most importantly, the "actual litigation"

component in  the collateral  estoppel analysis does  not require

that  Monarch Life  be shown  to have  advocated the  broad-based

"incidental" injunction, but only that the "jurisdictional" issue

was squarely raised by the 235 Banks,  thus giving Monarch Life a

full and fair opportunity to interpose objection if  it disagreed

with the 235  Banks' legal contentions.  See Blonder-Tongue Lab.,
                                                                         

402  U.S. at 328  (in order to further  the interests of finality

and judicial economy, collateral  estoppel doctrine requires that

litigant be afforded "one full and  fair opportunity for judicial

resolution" of the  issue).  Therefore, since the  section 105(a)

"jurisdictional" issue  was expressly broached in  the 235 Banks'

memorandum prior to  confirmation of the  Plan, and by  prominent

citation to decisions such as  A.H. Robins, supra, Monarch Life's
                                                           

silence alone satisfied the second criterion under the collateral

estoppel analysis.10
                    
                              

     10Monarch  Life argues  that  the     105(a) order  must  be
interpreted as  enjoining only the  noncontributors' cross-claims
                                        
impleading Plan  contributors, not  Monarch Life's initiation  in
Massachusetts Superior  Court of its principal  claim against the
noncontributing  Ropes &  Gray.   See Brief  for Appellant  at 21
                                               
(citing Pacor, Inc.  v. Higgins,  743 F.2d 984  (3d Cir.  1984)).
                                         
Even if  this "severability"  contention had merit,  the district

                                20


     3.   Actual Resolution
               3.   Actual Resolution
                                     

          Monarch Life  argues that a genuine  dispute remains as

to  whether  the  "ambiguous"  order   of  confirmation  actually

resolved the section 105(a) "jurisdictional" issue "litigated" by
                  

the parties prior to confirmation.  See Reply Brief for Appellant
                                                 

at 11 (citing Commonwealth of Mass. v. Departmental Grant Appeals
                                                                           

Bd.,  815  F.2d 778,  788 (1st  Cir.  1987) (party  may challenge
             

interpretation of ambiguous injunction not  previously interpret-

ed));  see  also In  re  Monarch Capital  Corp.,  173 B.R.  at 41
                                                         

("Appellants do not challenge the Bankruptcy Court's authority to

enter  the  Injunction .  . .  .").   Consequently, it  cannot be

presumed that the same issue was before the bankruptcy court both

in the  confirmation proceedings  and  the contempt  proceedings.

Its argument begs the question.  

          Monarch Life  asserts a two-pronged attack  against the

contempt order.  Its first line  of attack is that the injunctive

provision  in  the confirmation  order  cannot  be "expanded"  to

encompass   Ropes  &   Gray's   contingent  obligations   because

bankruptcy  courts  have  no  power  to  enter  such  broad-based
                                             

injunctions  under  section  105(a).     However,  it  cannot  be

considered  a  conclusive answer  to  Ropes  & Gray's  collateral

estoppel defense  for Monarch  Life to  say that it  subjectively
                                                                           
                    
                              

court  properly noted that it  had been waived  by Monarch Life's
failure to  raise it in the bankruptcy court contempt proceeding.
See  In re  Monarch Capital  Corp., 173  B.R. at  45 (issues  not
                                            
raised before the bankruptcy  court are deemed waived  on appeal)
(citing  Juniper Dev.  Group  v. Kahn  (In re  Hemingway Transp.,
                                                                           
Inc.), 993 F.2d 915, 935 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 114 S. Ct. 303
                                                           
(1993)). 

                                21


construed the confirmation order  more narrowly than its language

and context warranted.   See Piccicuto, 39 F.3d at  41 (rejecting
                                                

argument that prior judgment  was ambiguous and used "regrettably

loose language").   Rather,  Monarch Life's construction  must be

evaluated  against the objective  import of  the language  in the

confirmation  order  itself.     As  the  confirmation  order  is

dispositive, it is set out at length in the appendix.   See infra
                                                                           

Appendix pp. i-iii. 

          Monarch  Life mischaracterizes  the obvious  breadth of
                                                                        

the  confirmation order as ambiguity.   Even a  cursory review of
                                              

the confirmation  order demonstrates beyond doubt  that the third

criterion  in the collateral estoppel analysis has been met.  See
                                                                           

Grella, 42 F.3d  at 30-31  (issue may be  actually litigated  and
                

resolved "even if it is not explicitly decided," as long as it is

logically necessary to final decision).  

          Monarch Life  emphasizes the  fact that  the bankruptcy

court distinguished American  Hardwoods11    a case in  which the
                                                 

enjoined action had been  against a nondebtor who would  not have
                                                                           

contributed to the  chapter 11 plan    and then  stated that "the
                                                                           

                    
                              

     11Monarch Life points also to a decision entered  earlier in
an  unrelated adversary proceeding,  wherein the bankruptcy court
denied  the chapter  11  trustee's motion  to  enjoin a  suit  by
Monarch Capital shareholders against  Monarch Life.  It considers
that decision  probative because it noted  the bankruptcy court's
concern that such an injunction might exceed the limitations  set
forth  in American Hardwoods.   See In re  Monarch Capital Corp.,
                                                                          
No.  91-41379-JFQ (Bankr.  D. Mass.  Apr. 8,  1992).   We do  not
agree.  First,  the proposed  injunction involved  there was  not
part of    thus could not be "essential" to    the reorganization
plan.   Further,  the  bankruptcy court  expressly  distinguished
American Hardwoods in its final order of confirmation.  
                            

                                22


persons protected  by the [Monarch Capital]  Injunction have con-
                           

tributed substantial  amounts to  the Plan  . .  . ."   (Emphasis

added.)  But the bankruptcy court did not say that Plan contribu-

tors, such  as the  235 Banks  and  Monarch Life,  were the  only
                                                                           

entities  "protected" by the  injunction.   Rather, it  said that

this injunctive protection was  the reason for entering a  perma-
                                                    

nent injunction.  Moreover, in distinguishing American Hardwoods,
                                                                          

where protection for contributors was not at issue, the bankrupt-
                                                   

cy  court cited  with  approval several  decisions     like  A.H.
                                                                           

Robins, supra    (and provided  plain parenthetical descriptions)
                       

holding that  section 105(a) empowers bankruptcy  courts to grant

permanent injunctions  not only against  actions asserting claims

directly  against plan contributors, but "incidental" injunctions
                  

protecting plan  contributors from indirect claims for indemnifi-
                                                            

cation and contribution, at least where such protection is deemed

"essential" to the success  of a reorganization plan.   See infra
                                                                           

Appendix at p. i. 

          By citing  A.H. Robins, supra,  and cases of  its kind,
                                                 

the bankruptcy court plainly signaled its endorsement of the Plan

proponents' request for a broad injunction extending "incidental"

protection  to all  noncontributors who  might  otherwise implead

Plan contributors  as third-party defendants in  subsequent state

court actions.    The bankruptcy  court  then made  the  required

predicate findings for a broad "incidental" injunction as enumer-

ated in  A.H.  Robins.   It  found that  (1) the  injunction  was
                               

"essential"  to  garner  the  Plan  contributors'  cooperation in

                                23


Monarch  Capital's  reorganization,  and  (2)  Monarch  Capital's

creditors  overwhelmingly had approved  the injunctive provision.

See infra  Appendix at p. ii.   Monarch Life cannot  turn a blind
                   

eye  to the  plain  import of  the  injunctive provision  in  the

confirmation order, then under the  guise of an alleged  "ambigu-

ity"  attempt to  relitigate the  "jurisdiction" of the  court to

enter the injunction. 

          Finally, this is not  a conventional "preclusion" case,

wherein the court is required to interpret a first judgment which

was entered by a different tribunal.  Even though our interpreta-
                                    

tion of the confirmation order essentially presents a question of

law, see United States  v. O'Rourke, 943  F.2d 180, 186 (2d  Cir.
                                             

1991), the bankruptcy court in this case was interpreting its own

order of confirmation.  We think customary appellate deference is

appropriate in these circumstances with respect to the bankruptcy

court's  determination that  the  confirmation  order was  suffi-

ciently broad to confer "incidental"  protection to noncontribut-

ing  parties like Ropes &  Gray.12  Similarly,  because the bank-
                    
                              

     12See, e.g., In re Weber,  25 F.3d 413, 416 (7th Cir.  1994)
                                       
(noting that bankruptcy court's interpretation of its own confir-
mation order is entitled to same  deference as generally accorded
courts  construing  their  own  judgments);  William  B.  Schnach
                                                                           
Retirement Trust  v.  Unified Capital  Corp.  (In re  Bono  Dev.,
                                                                           
Inc.), 8 F.3d  720, 721-22 (10th  Cir. 1993) (same;  interpreting
              
bankruptcy court's "superpriority" order);  Texas N.W. Ry. Co. v.
                                                                        
Diamond Shamrock Ref.  & Mktg. Co. (In re  Chicago, Rock Island &
                                                                           
Pac.  R.R.  Co.), 865  F.2d 807,  810-11  (7th Cir.  1988) (same;
                         
construing bankruptcy court's order approving  sale); Ranch House
                                                                           
of  Orange-Brevard, Inc.  v.  Gluckstern (In  re  Ranch House  of
                                                                           
Orange-Brevard,  Inc.),  773 F.2d  1166,  1168  (11th Cir.  1985)
                               
(same; confirmation order); see  also generally Farmhand, Inc. v.
                                                                        
Anel  Eng'g Indus.,  Inc., 693  F.2d 1140,  1146 (5th  Cir. 1982)
                                   
(noting that district  courts are entitled to deference in inter-

                                24


ruptcy  court was  directly engaged in  the give-and-take  of the

confirmation  proceedings and  had the  better vantage  point for

determining  whether the parties had been  fairly apprised of the

"jurisdictional" issue,  we likewise  think it prudent  to accord

some deference to its determination that the section 105(a) issue

was  "actually litigated."   See  Ranch House  of Orange-Brevard,
                                                                           

Inc. v. Gluckstern (In  re Ranch House of  Orange-Brevard, Inc.),
                                                                         

773 F.2d 1166, 1168  (11th Cir. 1985) ("The bankruptcy  judge who

has  presided over  the case from  its inception  is in  the best

position to  clarify any apparent inconsistencies  in the court's

rulings."); supra Section II.B.2.
                           

          Notwithstanding the numerous  warning signals,  Monarch

Life  elected  to treat  the  obvious breadth  of  the injunctive

provision as  ambiguity.  The record  remains clear, nonetheless,

that the bankruptcy court's  "jurisdiction" to enjoin enforcement

of Monarch Life's claims against the noncontributing Ropes & Gray

was  actually litigated and  that Monarch Life  therefore was re-

quired, but  failed, to object  to the confirmation  order and/or

appeal from  the section 105(a) injunctive  provision included in

it.  

     4.   Essentiality
               4.   Essentiality
                                

          It follows, a fortiori, from our determination that the
                                          

confirmation order included an  "incidental" injunction, that the

bankruptcy court's ruling  on its  section 105(a)  "jurisdiction"
                    
                              

preting own  orders); Securities and  Exch. Comm'n v.  Sloan, 535
                                                                      
F.2d 679, 681 (2d  Cir. 1976) (same), cert. denied,  430 U.S. 966
                                                            
(1977).  

                                25


was essential to the effectiveness and validity of the injunctive

provision.   See  Stoll,  305 U.S.  at  171-72 ("Every  court  in
                                 

rendering a  judgment tacitly,  if not expressly,  determines its

jurisdiction over . . . the subject matter.").

                               III
                                         III

                            CONCLUSION
                                      CONCLUSION
                                                

          We  therefore hold  that  the issue  of the  bankruptcy

court's power to enter  its so-called "incidental" injunction was

precluded,  having been conclusively resolved in the confirmation

order which Monarch Life  neither opposed nor appealed.    Though

there is  conflicting authority on the  "jurisdictional" reach of

section  105(a), the  confirmation  order cited  precedent for  a

broad-based "incidental"  injunctive provision.   Cf. Restatement
                                                                           

(Second) of Judgments    29 cmt.  j (1980) (court  may refuse  to
                               

invoke  collateral  estoppel  if  first  judgment  was  "patently

incorrect").  Accordingly, Monarch Life cannot now argue that the

confirmation order is not subject to this broad construction.  We

express  no view on the soundness of  the precedents cited in the

confirmation order, nor on  their applicability to the particular

Plan proposed by  Monarch Life.13   The proper  recourse for  ad-
                    
                              

     13Ropes  & Gray  cross-appeals from  the bankruptcy  court's
refusal  to  award it  compensatory  damages  for Monarch  Life's
contempt.  See Brief for Appellee at 48 (citing Perker v.  United
                                                                           
States, 153 F.2d 66, 70 (1st Cir. 1946) (noting that "complainant
                
is entitled  as a matter of  right to an order  in civil contempt
imposing a  compensatory fine")).   As the district  court noted,
however, the level of  specificity needed to ground a  finding of
contempt  is not susceptible to precise  quantification.  We find
no  abuse of discretion in the bankruptcy court's implicit deter-
mination  that  Monarch Life  did  not commit  such  an egregious

                                26


dressing those questions was  by direct appeal from the  order of

confirmation.  

          Finally,  the  confirmation  order enjoined  all  post-

confirmation  lawsuits  "arising  from"  or  "related to"  claims

against Monarch  Capital.  See supra  p. 6.  The  complaint filed
                                              

against Ropes & Gray  in Massachusetts Superior Court by  Monarch

Life alleges a joint scheme  by Monarch Capital and Ropes  & Gray

to abuse the STIP account at  Monarch Life's expense    plainly a

claim "arising  from" Monarch  Life's STIP claim  against Monarch

Capital.   We  agree with  the  district court  that  it was  not

unreasonable  to expect that Ropes & Gray might attempt to assert

cross-claims  against parties  who  "contributed" to  the Monarch

Capital Plan,  or cross-claims  which  ultimately would  "affect"

Monarch Capital's property in  the hands of its "direct  or indi-

rect transferee[s]"  or "successor[s] in interest."  See supra p.
                                                                        

6; see also In re Monarch Capital Corp., 173 B.R.  at 45 (reject-
                                                 

ing  Monarch Life's argument that there is absolutely no conceiv-

able ground upon which Ropes & Gray might assert a cross-claim in

the superior court  action).   Thus, it is  academic whether  the

injunction also "protects" Ropes &  Gray as Monarch Life's former
                                                                           

"counsel." 

          The judgment of  the district court  is affirmed.   The
                    The judgment of  the district court  is affirmed.   The
                                                                           

parties shall bear their own costs.
          parties shall bear their own costs.
                                            
                    
                              

contempt as would compel the imposition of sanctions.  See, e.g.,
                                                                          
Johnston  Envtl. Corp. v. Knight  (In re Goodman),  991 F.2d 613,
                                                          
620 (9th Cir. 1993) (noting that bankruptcy court  has discretion
to  award no damages  if it finds  contempt insufficiently "egre-
gious").

                                27


                             APPENDIX
                                       APPENDIX
                                               

          Section  105 of  the  Bankruptcy  Code grants  the
     Court broad equitable power to issue any order, process
     or judgment  that is necessary or  appropriate to carry
     out  the provisions  of Title  11.   In re  Old Orchard
                                                                      
     Investment Co.,  31 Bankr. 599, 601  (W.D. Mich. 1983);
                             
     Menard-Sanford v.  Mabey (In  re A.H. Robins  Co.), 880
                                                                
     F.2d 694, 702 (4th Cir. 1989), cert. denied, 110 S. Ct.
                                                          
     376  (1989) (affirming  power  of  bankruptcy court  to
     enjoin  suits permanently against nondebtors in a plan,
     where  there  existed  certain  indemnification  rights
     against the debtor); In re Energy Co-op, Inc., 886 F.2d
                                                            
     921 (7th Cir. 1989) (permanent injunction issued pursu-
     ant to  settlement agreement); MacArthur Co.  v. Johns-
                                                                      
     Manville Corp. (In re Johns-Manville Corp.) 837 F.2d 89
                                                         
     (2d  Cir.  1988), cert.  denied,  488  U.S. 868  (1988)
                                              
     (permanent injunction  may  be issued  against  actions
     against an insurer  as part of settlement  incorporated
     in a  chapter 11 plan notwithstanding  claims that this
     impermissibly  discharged a nondebtor);  see In  re CCA
                                                                      
     Partnership,  70 Bankr.  696  (Bankr.  C.D. Cal.  1985)
                          
     (judgment  creditor  enjoined  from   enforcing  claims
     against debtor's individual partners).

          Section 105 grants  bankruptcy courts "ample power
     to  enjoin  actions  excepted from  the  automatic stay
     which  might interfere  in the  rehabilitative process,
     whether in a liquidation  or in a reorganization case."
     In re Johns Manville Corp.,  26 Bankr. 420, 425 (Bankr.
                                         
     S.D.N.Y. 1983), quoting Collier on Bankruptcy    362.05
                                                            
     (15th ed. 1982).  Further, bankruptcy courts "may issue
     or  extend stays  to  enjoin a  variety of  proceedings
     which  will  have an  adverse  impact  on the  debtor's
     ability to formulate a  Chapter 11 plan."  In  re Johns
                                                                      
     Manville Corp., 40 Bankr. 219, 226 (S.D.N.Y. 1984).
                             

          Under  section 105,  this Court  has the  power to
     issue  injunctions  which  prevent proceedings  against
     nondebtor third parties  where pursuit of such  actions
     would  materially and  adversely affect  the  estate or
     creditor recoveries  under  a plan  of  reorganization.
     See Codfish  Corp. v.  FDIC (In  re Codfish Corp.),  97
                                                                
     B.R. 132, 135 (Bankr. D.P.R. 1988) (injunctions  appro-
     priate  where there  is clear  and convincing  evidence
     "that the estate  would be substantially  and adversely
     affected by  the continuance of such an action"); In re
                                                                      
     Monroe Well Serv., Inc., 67  B.R. 746, 751 (Bankr. E.D.
                                      
     Pa. 1986) (injunctions appropriate to avoid anticipated
     adverse impact on bankruptcy estate); G.S.F. Corp., 938
                                                                 
     F.2d [1464,]  1474 [(1st Cir. 1991)  (adverse impact on
     debtor's estate required  for injunction against  third

                                i


     party actions).

          This Court  has the power to  approve the releases
     and issue  the Injunction with respect  to the Trustee,
     Temporary Receiver and creditors' Committee for matters
     in connection with the  chapter 11 case.  In  re Drexel
                                                                      
     Burnham Lambert Group, Inc., 138 B.R. [723, 753 (Bankr.
                                          
     S.D.N.Y. 1992)].  

          Where an injunction allows a settlement that forms
     the  basis of a chapter  11 plan to  take effect, where
     the entire settlement and hence  the plan hinges on the
     parties being free  from the very  claims that the  in-
     junction would prohibit, courts will order  the injunc-
     tive relief.  See,  e.g., In re A.H. Robins  Co., Inc.,
                                                                     
     880 F.2d  694 (4th  Cir.), cert.  denied, 493 U.S.  959
                                                       
     (1989); MacArthur Co., 837 F.2d  [at 89]; SEC v. Drexel
                                                                      
     Burnham Lambert,  Inc. (In  re  Drexel Burnham  Lambert
                                                                      
     Group, Inc.), 130 B.R. 910, 928 (S.D.N.Y. 1991), aff'd,
                                                                     
     960 F.2d 285 (2d Cir. 1992); UNARCO Bloomington Factory
                                                                      
     Workers v.  UNR Indus., Inc.,  124 B.R. 268  (N.D. Ill.
                                           
     1990);  Republic Supply  Co. v.  Shoaf, 815  F.2d 1046,
                                                     
     1050 (5th Cir. 1987).

          The  opinion of the Court  of Appeals in the Ninth
     Circuit in In re American  Hardwoods, 885 F.2d 621 (9th
                                                   
     Cir.  1989) is  inapposite.   In that  case, guarantors
     were protected  by the  provisions of a  plan, although
     they apparently provided no  contribution to that plan.
     The injunction  was not  shown to  be essential  to the
     plan.  The  court also  notes that  section 524(e),  on
     which  the Ninth Circuit relies, does  not by its terms
     preclude  the entry  of injunctive  relief in  favor of
     nondebtors  making   plan  contributions,  particularly
     where as here,  creditors have overwhelmingly consented
     to it. ...   In this case, the persons protected by the
     Injunction  have contributed substantial amounts to the
     Plan, creditors have agreed  to the Injunction in order
     to get these  payments, and the Injunction  is the only
     basis  on which  to build,  confirm and  effectuate the
     Plan.

          Recent  cases  following  American  Hardwoods  are
                                                                 
     distinguishable from the facts  of this case on similar
     grounds.   See, e.g.,  In re Western  Real Estate Fund,
                                                                     
     922 F.2d 592 (10th Cir. 1990).  In Western, an attorney
                                                         
     was not enjoined from collecting all fees for work done
     on behalf  of the debtor.   In  that case, the  fees at
     issue  were owed by a nondebtor third party who did not
     contribute  to the  debtor's  plan.   The attorney  was
     allowed  to collect against that third party.  In In re
                                                                      
     Rohnert  Park Auto Parts, Inc.,  113 B.R. 610 (9th Cir.
                                             

                                ii


     BAP 1990), a creditor was time barred from asserting  a
     claim  in the  debtor's bankruptcy.   The  creditor was
     enjoined  by  the  bankruptcy  court   from  collecting
     against a nondebtor third party who  was liable for the
     debt.  The [court] did not uphold that  plan provision.
     However, the  nondebtor third party had not contributed
     to  the funding  of the  plan, nor  was  the injunction
     shown essential to  that plan.  In  this case, however,
     the persons protected by the Injunction are the princi-
     pal contributors  of consideration to the  Plan.  Those
     persons  would not  contribute without  the Injunction.
     Therefore, Western Real  Estate and Rohnert Park  Auto,
                                                                     
     like American Hardwoods, are inapposite.
                                      

In  re Monarch Capital Corp., No. 91-41379-JFQ, slip op. at 23-27
                                      

(Bankr. D. Mass. June 25, 1992).

                               iii