Will drivers be stranded if it closes quickly?

ltcinsuranceshopper By ltcinsuranceshopper March 12, 2025


The KAL Freight bankruptcy case is heading toward a close. (Photo: Jim Allen\FreightWaves)
The KAL Freight bankruptcy case is heading toward a close. (Photo: Jim Allen\FreightWaves)

The bankruptcy action of KAL Freight, with its charges of corruption in the background, is nearing a “do or die point,” according to a filing in the case, with motions and countermotions flying back and forth last week in a Texas bankruptcy court.

The key takeaways from those motions are that KAL Freight still has plenty of trucks on the road, and that’s an issue; and the goal of a Chapter 11 proceeding, which is to allow a company to reorganize its ownership and debt load and continue operating, is not happening in the case of KAL Freight. Barring a miracle, this company is closing down, and it will be soon.

KAL Freight’s attorneys filed a liquidation plan with the bankruptcy court last week.

As the committee of unsecured creditors said in a filing in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas which used the “do or die” analogy, there are “only two possible outcomes remaining: (1) a consensual plan of liquidation; or (2) conversion to chapter 7.”

But a quick conversion to Chapter 7, a section of bankruptcy law for companies liquidating rather than reorganizing, is raising objections from some creditors.

Their concerns are not only that the physical assets that might grant them a level of compensation for their unpaid debts would be scattered all over the country in a rapid conversion to Chapter 7, but that drivers would be stranded as well.

That chaotic end to a trucking company has precedents. The wind-down of Celadon in late 2019 found some drivers stranded with their fuel cards canceled.

In a joint filing last week by Triumph Financial (NASDAQ: TFIN) and Daimler Truck Financial Services, the two companies argued against a quick conversion of the KAL Freight bankruptcy to a Chapter 7 liquidation proceeding. The potential consequences of that action, to both equipment and drivers, was the core of the two companies’ argument.

The companies were stark in a declaration about the future of KAL Freight. “The parties to these cases agree that [KAL Freight is] not financially able to continue operations for any extended period,” the filing said “The parties to these cases agree that a sale of substantially all of the assets of the estates is not possible. Accordingly, the Debtors will eventually need to convert to Chapter 7 proceedings or confirm a plan of liquidation.”

Triumph and Daimler lay out the amount of freight that KAL Freight still had out on the road as of Feb. 20: more than 800 loads with a value of between $30 million and $50 million. “That means there may be over 800 drivers, trucks and trailers spread throughout the U.S.,” the companies’ filing said. “Immediate conversion, and termination of funding of cash cards for these drivers, could leave drivers, customers’ cargo, trucks and trailers stranded, unprotected and at severe risk.”



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