Bergquist v. First National Bank of St. Paul (In Re American Lumber Co.)

5 B.R. 470, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16866
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedMay 14, 1980
Docket4-79 Civil 407
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 5 B.R. 470 (Bergquist v. First National Bank of St. Paul (In Re American Lumber Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bergquist v. First National Bank of St. Paul (In Re American Lumber Co.), 5 B.R. 470, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16866 (mnd 1980).

Opinion

RENNER, District Judge.

The defendant First National Bank of St. Paul (hereinafter, the “Bank”) appeals the decision of the Bankruptcy Court 1 granting judgment in favor of plaintiff Edward Bergquist, the trustee in bankruptcy of American Lumber Company (hereinafter, the “bankrupt” or “ALC”), finding that the transfers of security interests in inventory and equipment by the bankrupt to the Bank constituted voidable preferences under section 60 of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 96, that said transfers were fraudulent under sections 67(d)(2) and (3) of the Act, 11 U.S.C. § 107(d)(2) and (3), 2 that the plaintiff is, therefore, entitled to judgment against the Bank in the amount of $488,744.65 with the Bank’s claim being subordinated to the claims of the general unsecured creditors under the doctrine of equitable subordination.

I.

The bankrupt corporation, originally known as U. S. Lumber Company, began operations on January 17, 1975, following its purchase of the operating assets of the old American Lumber Company, a failing Minneapolis, Minnesota, wholesale lumber business. The officers of the new corporation, Paul A. Lilja, Ludwik Kulas and Timothy Peterson, all former employees of the old American Lumber Company, thereupon changed the name of their new company to the American Lumber Company. The purchase was financed by loans totalling $2.5 million dollars from defendant Bank, the primary lender of the old American Lumber Company, under the following documented terms:

(1) The Bank loaned $1 million to a newly created entity called the ALC Employees’ *473 Stock Ownership Trust (hereinafter, “ESOT”) to be repaid in quarterly installments of $31,250 plus interest. The loan was secured by a pledge of all shares of ALC stock owned by ESOT and a guaranty issued by ALC itself. ESOT was issued 10,000 shares (92 per cent of the outstanding stock) in return for its million dollar contribution to ALC’s assets. The remaining 780 shares were purchased by the officers of the new corporation with $80,000 in loans from the Bank. These loans were also secured by pledge of stock.

(2) The Bank made two separate loans to ALC totalling $1.5 million. A $1 million loan was secured by accounts and contract rights, and a $500,000 loan was secured by accounts and contract rights as well as a second mortgage on real estate. Promissory notes on both loans provided for installment payments commencing March 31, 1975.

(3) The entire $2.5 million was used by ALC to purchase the assets and liabilities of the old American Lumber Company. Nearly $2.4 million of that was used by the old American Lumber Company to pay off its debts to the Bank.

(4) In order to generate sufficient funds for ESOT to repay its loan to the Bank, 25 per cent of the officers’ salaries were to be contributed to ESOT with the Bank’s approval. The aggregate amount of their salaries was, therefore, set at the relatively high level of $300,000 per year.

ALC subsequently purchased lumber, held it in inventory and sold it to residential and commercial builders. However, starting in May 1975 and continuing throughout the summer and fall of that year, losses began showing up on its monthly unaudited financial statements. The September loss was a high of $132,000. In order to meet cash-flow needs, ALC borrowed an additional $100,000 from the Bank on September 19, 1975.

ESOT’s April 15 and July 15, 1975 loan installment payments were timely made by ALC. The October 15, 1975 payment was not made, thus placing ESOT in default on its $937,500 principal balance. ALC was also in apparent substantial default under several provisions of its loan agreement with the Bank.

On October 17,1975 ALC’s principals met with bank officers Richard L. Shepley and Dennis K. Dingman and advised them of ALC’s default, its acute cash shortage and a “cut-back” proposal designed to improve its financial stability. On October 20,1975 the Bank began bouncing overdrafts on ALC’s general and payroll accounts. The next day, the bank officers and their counsel, Jerome Simon and Charles Bans, met with the ALC principals and their counsel, Leo Stern. Shepley announced that the Bank was calling in all of ALC’s loans. Foreclosure of the Bank’s security interests was also discussed. Attorney Simon was then informed that the Bank had no security interest on inventory or equipment. Following some discussion, Simon announced that he had an idea whereby the Bank could get such security interests and, in effect, diminish the protection to the general unsecured creditors. ALC had about $400,000 worth of unsecured debt at this time. ALC would not agree to grant the security interest, and no course of action was agreed upon at that time. The Bank was at this time considering the possibility of placing ALC in bankruptcy.

On October 22, 1975 the same ALC and Bank officers met again. Discussion at this meeting centered around the value of ALC’s interest in an Indian housing project called Lame Deer, Montana, in which ALC had made a substantial investment and which, if all went well, would result in substantial receivables in the future. No further agreements were reached at this meeting, however, and ALC continued to refuse to execute security agreements on its inventory and equipment.

On October 23,1975 another meeting was held at which time the Bank told ALC that no further advances would be made, that ALC was, indeed, considered to be in default on its loans, and that all funds in the Bank’s custody would be and were being used to offset ALC’s obligations to it. The Bank’s intentions were put into writing on *474 October 24, 1975 in the form of a letter from Dingman to Lilja, as president of ALC. ALC conveyed security interests in inventory and equipment to the Bank on the same date. The Bank then began the liquidation of ALC.

The Bank commenced foreclosure on its security interests in accounts receivable and contract rights. It also began receiving and opening all in-coming mail at the ALC office on a daily basis and established a “collateral” or “dominion” account into which all amounts received by ALC were deposited. Dingman was the sole signatory, and the Bank had sole control of the account. At no time thereafter did the Bank relinquish its control over the collection of accounts receivable. All ALC employees were terminated on October 24, 1975. A skeleton crew necessary for an orderly liquidation was rehired on October 31, 1980, upon the Bank’s approval and its agreement to honor payroll checks. The Bank also contacted Park Detective Agency, Inc., a security guard service ALC had employed to guard its Minneapolis lumber yard, and employed it to secure the premises.

The Bank began scrutinizing checks presented for payment by ALC payees and made the determinations as to which would be paid. These determinations were based upon whether or not such payment would likely enhance the value of the accounts receivable in which defendant had a perfected security interest. General unsecured creditors were not paid unless such payment would increase the value of an account receivable.

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Bluebook (online)
5 B.R. 470, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bergquist-v-first-national-bank-of-st-paul-in-re-american-lumber-co-mnd-1980.