Bankruptcy was unavoidable, Detroit lawyer tells court

By Joseph Lichterman

DETROIT, Nov 8 (Reuters) - Detroit on Friday wrapped up its effort to prove that it is eligible for the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history, clashing with unions, retirees and pension funds over whether good faith negotiations were feasible before the city filed for court protection on July 18.

During closing arguments of the nine-day eligibility trial, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes pressed city attorneys to show Detroit gave a good-faith effort to reach an out-of-court settlement with creditors. Rhodes also pushed lawyers for those opposing Detroit's bankruptcy to show they presented a viable alternative to bankruptcy.

Detroit's unions, government retirees and two pension funds are trying to keep the city out of bankruptcy and Detroit must prove to Rhodes that it meets the criteria for eligibility.

To declare Detroit eligible, Rhodes will need to decide that the city proved it is insolvent, and that it acted in good faith when it decided negotiations with creditors were impractical.

Rhodes asked attorneys on both sides to file papers by Wednesday regarding the definition of good-faith negotiations. He will rule sometime after receiving those briefs.

The closing arguments capped a trial that has stretched across three weeks and included rare testimony from a sitting governor, Michigan's Rick Snyder. Detroit Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr and a parade of other city and state officials, consultants, retirees and union leaders also testified.

City attorney Bruce Bennett argued on Friday that Detroit did negotiate in good faith even as it recognized that it was unlikely to reach an out-of-court agreement with creditors.

"I think what the city did was they said: 'This is extremely difficult to achieve, but we're going to try anyway,'" Bennett said in his closing argument.

"You absolutely can believe in your head that this is never going to work, but try anyway. And I think that is the situation in this case."

His remarks about Detroit's decision to forego further negotiations came in response to a question from Rhodes, who questioned whether the city's arguments were logically consistent.

"It strikes me as factually impossible for it to be impracticable for that party to negotiate with other parties in any circumstance, and to negotiate with them in good faith," Rhodes said.

Rhodes also pressed Bennett on whether Orr misled retirees during a June 10 public meeting by making statements that pensions were "sacrosanct" and that there was only a "50-50 chance" that the city would file for bankruptcy.