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In re Kinser Group LLC: Incorrect assumptions in bankruptcy case undermine hotel appraisal

hotel-signAppraisals are often used in federal bankruptcy proceedings. But an expert’s opinion is only as reliable as his or her underlying assumptions, as demonstrated by a recent decision by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Arizona. 

Hard times for hotels

The case involves two hotels located in a college town in Indiana. The town had only about 1,000 hotel rooms when the debtor purchased the hotels in 2017. By the end of 2020, the town had about 2,900 rooms. Population and visitor growth were static during this period.

COVID-related shutdowns adversely affected the hotels’ financial performance. For example, October 2020 revenue fell $1.9 million from the prior year. Even before the pandemic, though, occupancy rates had fallen more than 25% for each hotel.

The debtor filed for bankruptcy on October 7, 2020. It subsequently filed a valuation motion to determine how to treat the bank’s claims under the reorganization plan. The plan indicated the debtor would continue to operate the hotels, rather than dispose of them. So, the appraiser was required to determine the hotels’ replacement value.

Dueling valuations

The debtor’s appraiser found an aggregate fair market value of about $4.5 million for both hotels. The bank’s appraiser came to a value that was approximately $3.7 million higher. The bankruptcy court found the bank’s appraisals to be “fundamentally flawed” due to faulty assumptions. 

Specifically, the bank’s appraiser assumed the hotels would be sold in October 2020. This, the court said, rendered his appraisals defective for purposes of valuing a creditor’s collateral. Under Section 506(a) of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, value must be determined in light of the proposed disposition or use of the property.

The court also noted that the appraiser assumed a buyer would need to promptly spend $3 million to satisfy property improvement plans that hotel brand licensors would require. Those expected improvements, in turn, drove the appraiser’s projected revenue numbers. In addition, the appraiser assumed that the improvements would be financed with capital reserves and capital contributions. However, the debtor had no capital reserves, and the reorganization plan didn’t contemplate an imminent capital call.

As a result, the court concluded the properties weren’t worth the proposed $8.2 million. Instead, they were worth about $5.7 million.

Bottom line

The court refused to accept the “overly rosy” projections of the bank’s appraiser. Instead, it found the debtor’s appraisal “more probable,” particularly in light of the tight competition and short- and long-term damage of the pandemic. As this case shows, it’s important to evaluate whether an expert’s assumptions appear reasonable before you go to court. 

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