ABM Escrow Closing & Consulting, Inc. v. Matanuska Maid, Inc.

659 P.2d 1170, 35 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 936, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 372
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1983
Docket6457
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 659 P.2d 1170 (ABM Escrow Closing & Consulting, Inc. v. Matanuska Maid, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ABM Escrow Closing & Consulting, Inc. v. Matanuska Maid, Inc., 659 P.2d 1170, 35 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 936, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 372 (Ala. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Justice.

I. Background.

A petition for hearing was granted in this matter to consider an appellate decision of the superior court. The superior court, reversing the district court, held that ABM Escrow Closing and Consulting, Inc. (ABM), which handled the sale of an Anchorage A & W restaurant, is liable to one of the restaurant’s creditors for failing to pay that creditor’s account from the proceeds of the sale of the restaurant. The issue before us is whether Article 6 of the Uniform Commercial Code (Bulk Transfers) 1 applies, directly or by estoppel, to the sale of the restaurant. We conclude that it does not, and accordingly we reverse.

In early 1979, ABM acted as escrow agent for the sale of an A & W restaurant. The restaurant’s sellers gave ABM a list of the restaurant’s creditors, one of which was respondent Matanuska Maid; ABM then sent the named creditors a notice which is the center of controversy in this case. The notice provided in pertinent part that “[t]his is to give notice as required by the Alaska Statutes governing Bulk Sales that a bulk transfer of the [restaurant] is about to be made.... All debts of the transfer-ors are to be paid in full.... All bills should be sent to ABM.... ” Matanuska Maid received a copy of this notice on January 29, 1979 but did not contact ABM until almost five months later.

Between April 13, 1979 and May 1979, ABM paid all the debts of the restaurant’s other creditors and apparently disbursed the remaining sale proceeds to the sellers. On June 20, Matanuska Maid’s controller contacted ABM to inquire about payment; ABM informed him that the sale proceeds had long since been disbursed. Matanuska Maid then sued ABM and the sellers for the amount of the debt, about $1,600; only ABM’s liability is at issue on review. 2

Matanuska Maid argues that ABM is liable for the debt because Article 6 required that the debt be paid from the proceeds of the sale of the restaurant. Alternatively, Matanuska Maid contends that if Article 6 does not of its own force require payment, *1172 the requirements of the Article nonetheless are applicable by estoppel because ABM’s notice to creditors expressly stated that notice was being given “as required by the Alaska Statutes governing Bulk Sales.”

After a bench trial, the district court ruled in favor of ABM; on appeal the superior court agreed with the district court that Article 6 is not applicable to the sale of a restaurant, but concluded that ABM nonetheless was liable because Article 6 applied by estoppel.

II. Article 6 and Sales of Restaurants.

Article 6 applies to “a transfer in bulk and not in the ordinary course of the transferor’s business of a major part of the [business’s] materials, supplies, merchandise or other inventory” 3 if the enterprise is one “whose principal business is the sale of merchandise from stock.” 4 If a transfer is within the purview of Article 6, the buyer must obtain a list of the business’s creditors from the seller and give those creditors notice of the pending transfer. In addition, Alaska, unlike many states, has adopted a further provision which gives creditors the right to be paid from the proceeds of the transfer. 5 In our view, however, the requirements of Article 6 are inapplicable in this case because the sale of a restaurant is not the kind of transaction to which Article 6 is intended to apply.

We note first that the official comments accompanying Article 6 expressly state that restaurants are excluded from the Article. 6 Although the official comments are not necessarily controlling in interpreting the scope and intent of the Uniform Commercial Code provisions, they are “of persuasive assistance” in construing and applying the Code. Morrow v. New Moon Homes, Inc., 548 P.2d 279, 287 n. 24 (Alaska 1976).

Second, virtually every court that has considered the question has concluded that Article 6 does not apply to sales of restaurants. 7 Although precedent from other jurisdictions is, of course, not binding upon us, we nonetheless are mindful of the fact that a basic objective of the Uniform Commercial Code is to promote national uniformity in the commercial arena and that this objective would be undermined should we decline to follow the stated intent of the Code’s drafters and the reasoned decisions of a number of other jurisdictions.

Finally, and most importantly, we conclude that Article 6 is inapplicable because the evils that the article is intended to prevent are not present in this case.

In general, Article 6 is designed to protect unsecured trade creditors from the possibility that an unscrupulous merchant *1173 will sell most or all of his inventory in a single transaction and disappear with the proceeds without paying his creditors. At common law an aggrieved creditor had little or no recourse when faced with this kind of event. Once the debtor sold his inventory, the creditor could not reach the goods in the buyer’s hands as long as the buyer was a bona fide purchaser. By hypothesis, the creditor had little hope of obtaining satisfaction from the personal assets of the debtor. To remedy this problem, most states enacted bulk sales laws which offered various kinds of protection to creditors. These statutes have gradually been replaced as states have adopted Article 6 of the Uniform Commercial Code, which is intended to give unsecured trade creditors some measure of protection against less-than-honest debtors.

In many states Article 6 is simply a notice requirement. The article entitles creditors to receive advance notice of a bulk transfer, but does not confer upon creditors any specific remedy for collecting their debts. 8 Alaska is among the minority of the states which have adopted a provision that imposes upon a bulk purchaser the obligation not only to notify creditors, but also to pay creditors’ claims, to the extent of the purchase price, from the proceeds of the transaction. 9

In our view, these protections are not applicable in this case because the sale of a restaurant does not present the evils that Article 6 is designed to prevent. As the commentary to Article 6 explains, 10 restaurants were not intended to be covered by the article because restaurants’ trade creditors generally do not extend unsecured credit on the faith of the restaurants’ stock of merchandise, and thus creditors suffer no appreciable detriment when a restaurant sells all or most of its stock at once rather than in the ordinary course of business. 11

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Bluebook (online)
659 P.2d 1170, 35 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 936, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abm-escrow-closing-consulting-inc-v-matanuska-maid-inc-alaska-1983.