Ames Merchandising Corp. v. Cellmark Paper Inc. (In Re Ames Department Stores, Inc.)

450 B.R. 24
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 28, 2011
Docket19-10115
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 450 B.R. 24 (Ames Merchandising Corp. v. Cellmark Paper Inc. (In Re Ames Department Stores, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ames Merchandising Corp. v. Cellmark Paper Inc. (In Re Ames Department Stores, Inc.), 450 B.R. 24 (N.Y. 2011).

Opinion

DECISION AFTER TRIAL

ROBERT E. GERBER, Bankruptcy Judge.

In this adversary proceeding under the umbrella of the chapter 11 cases of Ames Department Stores and affiliates (the “Debtors”), Debtor plaintiff Ames Merchandising Corporation (“Ames”) seeks to avoid and recover as preferential transfers, pursuant to sections 547 and 550 of the Bankruptcy Code (the “Code”), four transfers, made by three checks, to defendant Cellmark Paper, Inc. (“Cellmark”), the supplier of paper used by Ames for promotional material. After trial, the Court determines that Cellmark failed to rebut the presumption of insolvency, and failed to establish an ordinary course of business defense. Accordingly, the Court determines that the four transfers were preferential, and an appropriate judgment will be entered in favor of Ames.

Findings of Fact 1

1. Background

Prior to filing for bankruptcy on August 20, 2001 (the “Petition Date”), the Debtors operated over 400 retail stores throughout the northeastern United States. Promotions and advertising were crucial to Ames’ business strategy, and Ames attributed over 50% of store revenue to advertised sales. Ames relied on printed circulars to inform customers of these *27 promotions, and the printed circulars would then be inserted into local newspapers or mailed directly to customers. Once a year, in preparation for the fall season, Ames printed a particularly large circular known as the “Home Book” which contained advertising for the fall furniture season. Cellmark was Ames’ principal paper supplier for all of these circulars, including the Home Book. Ames was also one of Cellmark’s largest customers and top credit exposures.

A.Ames and Cellmark’s Relationship

In the three years of the parties’ prior dealings, Cellmark issued approximately 300 invoices to Ames. 2 Each of these invoices was generated by Cellmark’s. computerized invoicing system, called Paper-soft. 3 The Papersoft system automatically generated an invoice to Ames once Cell-mark received confirmation from its own paper suppliers that the paper had shipped. 4

Between June 1, 2000, and the beginning of the preference period (the “Preference Period”) — 90 days before the Petition Date — Ames employed an automated accounts payable system created by Oracle to track orders and generate payments to all of its domestic merchandise vendors. 5 During that same period, Ames paid invoices in full at or around the invoice due date, as its computerized payables system automatically printed checks according to payment due date without regard to the identity of the vendor. 6 The computer generated checks were routinely mailed to vendors within a day or two of being printed. 7

B. Changes in Ames’ Accounts Payable System

In May 2001, as Ames’ liquidity was tightening and cash was becoming increasingly tight, Ames executives, including CFO Rolando de Aguiar, began holding regular meetings to decide which vendors should be paid. 8 The decisions were based on the identity of the vendor and the needs of Ames’ business. 9 For on-account and early payments, Susan Cotter, Ames’ Director of Payables, would implement the decision of the group by manually overriding the Oracle computer system and generating a check in the requested amount. 10 By August 2001, in the last three weeks before Ames’ chapter 11 filing, Ames was not issuing any checks to its creditors pursuant to a general check run. Instead, Ames issued checks only to pay invoices specifically selected out of the Oracle database and based upon specific requests. 11

C. Creditor Pressure

Once the changes in the accounts pay-ables system were implemented, Eugene Bankers, Ames’ Senior Vice President of Marketing and Advertising, or one of his subordinates, repeatedly inquired with Cotter about the status of payments to Cellmark- — -seeking to ascertain whether payments to Cellmark were approved by *28 the group and requesting that checks be issued to Cellmark.

During the preference Period, Cellmark did not contact or communicate to Bankers or anyone else at Ames about lack of payment on any of Cellmark’s invoices, and Bankers did not tell anyone at Ames to the contrary. 12 But Bankers communicated to others at Ames that if Ames did not send payment to Cellmark, Ames would not get the circular out, and would go out of business. 13 Bankers told Cellmark CEO Joe Hoffman that he was “aggressive with [Ames’] finance department to make sure that checks sent were being sent on a continuity [sic] basis to them.” 14

At deposition nine months before trial, Dominick Merole, Cellmark’s Vice President of Finance and Credit testified that he could not remember anything about Ames’ financial condition in 2001. But at trial he testified that no one at Cellmark knew of Ames’ financial difficulty. Merole thereafter recanted the statement, returning to the explanation he gave at deposition. As Vice President of Finance, Mer-ole received Ames’ 2001 quarterly filings, and notifications from Credit Risk Monitor reporting events such as downgrades in credit rating. 15 But Merole could not find the Ames customer file that would have contained those quarterly filings and credit updates. Though it may not be ultimately dispositive (since the Court does not find that Cellmark affirmatively placed pressure on Ames), the Court disbelieves Mer-ole’s later-retracted statement that nobody at Cellmark knew of Ames’ financial condition, and also disbelieves his statement that he couldn’t remember anything about it — in each case by reason of information Merole received and Ames’ importance as a customer. 16

D. Extension of Credit

Cellmark’s last invoice to Ames was dated July 17, 2001, weeks before the transfers at issue and over one month before the Petition Date. 17 During the three years before the Preference Period, Cell-mark issued invoices to Ames almost weekly, and there was no similar 34-day break in the issuance of invoices as there was between the last invoice and the Petition Date. 18

E. Industry Standard

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Bluebook (online)
450 B.R. 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ames-merchandising-corp-v-cellmark-paper-inc-in-re-ames-department-nysb-2011.