SalemNews.com, Salem, MA

Business

July 8, 2009

Judge denies motion to fast-track GM sale appeal

NEW YORK (AP) — The sale of most of General Motors' assets is moving closer to completion, after a bankruptcy judge denied motions by groups with asbestos and injury-related claims seeking to halt the sale and appeal directly to the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals.

The sale remains scheduled to close by July 10.

On Tuesday, a group representing people with product liability claims filed a motion asking that their appeal of U.S. Judge Robert Gerber's approval of GM's asset sale plan be fast-tracked to the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals, skipping district court.

In addition, a group representing people with asbestos-related claims against the automaker filed a motion asking that GM's sale be put on hold until their appeal can be heard by a federal district court judge.

Gerber refused both motions Tuesday evening. In a detailed written ruling, Gerber said he denied the request for a stay of the sale because he saw no "substantial possibility" that the groups would prevail at the 2nd Circuit, given how that court previously ruled on Chrysler's similar sale.

Gerber also pointed to the government's pledge to cut off funding to GM if the sale isn't approved by Friday, which would force GM to liquidate. The Treasury Department is expected to provide about $50 billion in aid to the automaker.

"We simply don't have the luxury of letting GM languish in bankruptcy while an appellate court considers the issues the Tort Litigants and Asbestos Litigants want to raise," Gerber wrote.

Objectors to GM's sale still have until noon Thursday to file appeals. After that, the sale will be free to close at midnight.

Late Sunday, Gerber approved Detroit-based GM's plan to sell the bulk of its assets to a new government-controlled company as part of its plan to quickly emerge from Chapter 11 protection. The product liability and asbestos groups filed their appeals the next day.

Gerber's Sunday ruling followed a three-day hearing that wrapped up last Thursday. GM and government officials had urged a quick approval of the sale, saying it was needed to keep the automaker from selling itself off piece by piece.

The product liability group objected to parts of the plan that would free the "new GM" from liability for people injured by a defective GM product before June 1.

Steve Jakubowski, an attorney for that group, had argued that GM's case should be allowed to take the same path as fellow automaker Chrysler LLC, where appeals of that company's sale were sent directly to the 2nd Circuit. He added that if the sale goes through as structured, people with affected claims will have little reason to keep pursuing them because the potential damages they would be able to recover would be so minimal, he said.

But GM Attorney Harvey Miller argued that sending the appeal straight to the 2nd Circuit would be an extraordinary measure that just isn't warranted in this case, given that the same issues were already decided by the appeals court in the Chrysler case.

Miller also said that granting the stay requested by the asbestos group could cause GM's assets to "go down in flames" and result in no recovery for any of the company's stakeholders.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Business

AP Video
Stocks Fall Sharply As Greek Deal Is Held Up $25B Settlement Reached Over Foreclosure Abuses States, Banks Reach Foreclosure-abuse Settlement Bernanke: Recovery Depends on Consumer Spending And the Winner for Best Super Bowl Ad Is... Unemployment Rate Down to 8.3% Hiring Burst Pushes Jobless Rate Down to 8.3% Status Update: Facebook to Go Public, Raise $5B Pfizer Recalls 1M Birth Control Packs Pfizer Recalls 1M Birth Control Packs After Mixup $10 Billion Deutsche Boerse, NYSE Merger Blocked Stocks Have Best January Since '97 Serbia Buys US Steel Plant for $1 Will Investors 'Like' Facebook After IPO? Fed Moves Mean Little Interest for Savers Fed Unlikely to Raise Rates Until at Least 2014 RIM's Future Lies With New CEO's Decisions Lagarde to Europe: Boost Growth and Protections Tom Curley Announces His Retirement AP CEO Tom Curley Announces His Retirement
NDN Video
Woolly Mammoth Caught on Camera? Sandusky makes a statement Halle Wants to Leave the Country Did JLo 'Assault' Marc Anthony on Camera? Toddler forced to run half-naked in snow Christie Brinkley's Runway Slip Northern Lights shine above earth Plane makes perfect belly landing Kris Jenner New Face of Arousal Oils Raw Video: School Bus Burst Into Flames Trending: Zip it! What's in Steve Jobs' FBI file? SJP Talks About Replacing Demi Moore in 'Lovelace' Over 200 dead dolphins wash ashore Lady Gaga's Battle With Bulimia Evacuation at Sea Osama Bin Laden Zombie Movie: "Osombie" Teaser Released LA School Reopens Amid Sex Abuse Scandal VS Model Quits Over Religion Raw Video: Italy's Mount Etna Bursts Into Life
Comments Trcker