IN RE OWENS CORNING
    
      419 F.3d 195 (2005)
    
      NATURE OF THE CASE: Credit Suisse (D), agent for a syndicate of banks that extended a 
      $2,000,000,000 loan to Corning (P) and certain of its subsidiaries, appealed a judgment 
      granting a motion to consolidate the assets and liabilities of the borrowers and guarantors 
      in anticipation of a plan of reorganization.
    
      FACTS: P and its subsidiaries (which include corporations and limited liability 
      companies) comprise a multinational corporate group. Each subsidiary was a separate legal 
      entity that observed governance formalities. The financial statements of all the 
      subsidiaries were accurate in all material respects. In 1997 P sought a loan to acquire 
      Fibreboard Corporation. P faced growing asbestos liability and a poor credit rating that 
      hindered its ability to obtain financing. D submitted a bid wherein D got direct claims 
      against the guarantors for payment defaults. Without these 'credit enhancements' D would not 
      have made the loan. The Agreement expressly limited the ways in which P could deal with its 
      subsidiaries. P could not enter into transactions with a subsidiary that would result in 
      losses to that subsidiary. Under the agreement, the subsidiaries agreed explicitly to 
      maintain themselves as separate entities. They agreed to keep separate books and financial 
      records in order to prepare separate financial statements. D was given the right to visit 
      each subsidiary and discuss business matters directly with that subsidiary's management. The 
      subsidiaries also were prohibited from merging into P because both entities were required to 
      survive a transaction under the Agreement. This provision also prohibited guarantor 
      subsidiaries from merging with other subsidiaries unless there would be no effect on the 
      guarantees' value. P and seventeen of its subsidiaries filed Chapter 11. Twenty-seven months 
      later, the Debtors and certain unsecured creditor groups (Plan Proponents) proposed a 
      reorganization plan predicated on obtaining 'substantive consolidation' of the Debtors along 
      with three non-Debtor OCD subsidiaries. The Plan arrangement sought a deemed consolidation 
      of all assets and liabilities of the subsidiaries into their parent and treats all claims 
      against the subsidiaries as transferred to the parent. The Plan eliminates the separate 
      obligations of the Subsidiary Debtors arising from the guarantees of D's Agreement. D 
      objected to the consolidation. The judge determined that there was no basis for a finding 
      that, in extending credit, D relied upon the separate credit of any of the subsidiary 
      guarantors. It was also found that a substantive consolidation would greatly simplify and 
      expedite the successful completion of this entire bankruptcy proceeding.
    
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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