Blum v. Williams (In Re Blum)

49 B.R. 422, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 6283
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedApril 19, 1985
Docket18-61423
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 B.R. 422 (Blum v. Williams (In Re Blum)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blum v. Williams (In Re Blum), 49 B.R. 422, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 6283 (Mo. 1985).

Opinion

ORDER DENYING THE OBJECTION OF STEPHEN RANDEL BLUM TO THE SETTLEMENT PREVIOUSLY EFFECTED BETWEEN THE TRUSTEE IN BANKRUPTCY AND THE OTHER RESPONDENTS

DENNIS J. STEWART, Bankruptcy Judge.

In the hearing conducted by the court on November 9, 1984, in Joplin, Missouri, it was ascertained that the petitioners no longer had any objection respecting the amounts which had been paid by the former trustee and the current trustee to the United Missouri Bank of Carthage, but rather that the debtor’s entire objection was now addressed to the reasonableness of the settlement with the General Motors Acceptance Corporation. In support of this objection, the debtors assert that they did not receive timely notice of the proposed settlement which was ultimately approved by the court. They further state that the settlement which was approved by the court was to the effect that the trustee should accept the sum of $7,000 from General Motors Acceptance Corporation in full settlement of any claim based on the dealer reserve account held by the latter; that, as of the date of bankruptcy, the monies in that dealer reserve account were in excess of $20,000; and that, under the following contractual provisions, the trustee in bankruptcy, as the successor in interest of Blum Chevrolet, Inc., was entitled to receive that amount as of the date of bankruptcy:

*424 “In the case of contracts supported by the dealer’s guaranty, whether unconditional or governed by the foregoing provisions for division of responsibility, GMAC, in purchasing such contracts at the rate of discount established by it with the dealer, retains out of the proceeds an amount equal to a designated percentage of the itemized unpaid balance-amount financed in the contract. GMAC credits to the dealer’s account all amounts so retained, subject to GMAC’s right to hold such credits as security for payment, and at its own election to apply same at any time in satisfaction of any obligation of the dealer to GMAC, whether or not such obligation results from the dealer’s guaranty.
“GMAC periodically pays to the dealer the amount, if any by which the aggregate of credits held by GMAC at the time of such periodic payments exceeds a designated percentage of the aggregate amount of the unpaid balances under contracts purchased up to that time from the dealer and then outstanding. However, in the event that GMAC deems the dealer substantially to have discontinued submitting retail contracts to it for purchase, whether by virtue of liquidation of the dealer’s business or for any other reason, GMAC reserves the right to discontinue payment of any such excess of credits and to continue to retain such credits up to an amount which in GMAC’s estimation is sufficient for the foregoing mentioned security purpose. As liquidation of the dealer’s obligation progresses, any sums in excess of that considered as sufficient by GMAC will be paid periodically to the dealer.”

See “The GMAC Wholesale Plan,” p. 16, as incorporated into the “GMAC Retail Plan” contract with Schumacher & Blum Chevrolet, Inc., signed September 29, 1980. It is to be noted that, under the explicit terms of the governing contract, GMAC had the right to estimate, in its sole discretion, the amount which was to be retained as security for possible future defaults by customers. Further, even after liquidation of .a business, GMAC had the right to retain all amounts considered necessary by it, in its sole discretion, “as sufficient.” This contract, according to its precise wording, confers no right of payment to any certain or calculable sum upon the debtor corporation, nor upon its successor trustee in bankruptcy. This is an important facet of the review of the former settlement, for the courts have generally held that it is the terms of the contract which control the matter and that, if they do not grant the debtor any right of payment as of the date of bankruptcy, then none of the funds in the dealer reserve account become part of the bankruptcy estate. Thus, in the case of Matter of American Motor Home Rentals, 10 B.R. 53, 54, 55 (Bkrtcy.W.D.Mo. 1981), when the contract expressly provided that credits “in excess of $4,000 of the then aggregate total payments of all contracts purchases” were payable to the debt- or as that excess might arise, the excess was payable to the debtor’s trustee in bankruptcy as of the date of bankruptcy. 1 But, in a later case, in which the contract did not grant any right to payment, the district court has held that the dealer reserve account is not payable in any part to the debtor or his successor in interest, the trustee in bankruptcy, as of the date of bankruptcy. 2 It is at least doubtful, as *425 noted above, that the above quoted contract grants the debtor any right of recovery of excess amounts as of the date of bankruptcy; rather, it appears to leave payment within the discretion of GMAC. If so, according to the district court’s holding, the trustee could have recovered nothing from the GMAC on account of any excess in the dealer reserve account.

And certainly, the trustee was entitled to take the potential for non-recovery manifestly offered by this decisional law into account in making his compromise and settlement. Further, since the date of the hearing of November 9, 1984, this court has again reviewed the court file in Daniels, trustee, v. General Motors Acceptance Corporation, Adversary Action No. 83-0192-SW (Bkrtcy. W.D.Mo. July 28, 1983). It shows that the defendant General Motors Acceptance Corporation in that case had seized upon this point of law to assert that “the total amount of ... customer prepayments, repossessions and losses cannot be determined until all said customer contracts assigned to GMAC by Debtor have been liquidated which, according to the expiration date of existing customer accounts will be November 1985.” See “Amended Answer and Affirmative Defenses of Defendant, General Motors Acceptance Corporation (GMAC), filed May 23, 1983, in Adversary Action No. 83-0192-SW. Under such circumstances, if proven, when the right to payment could only accrue after the date of bankruptcy, the district court opinion would preclude any finding that the monies in the dealer reserve account in any part belonged to the estate in bankruptcy. Discovery conducted by the trustee in connection with that adversary action further demonstrated that, as of April 29, 1983, there was some $15,-704.21 in the dealer reserve account. The debtor Stephen Randel Blum, in the course of the hearings which have been conducted by this court, has complained that much more was in the dealer reserve account as of the date of bankruptcy. In this regard, his contentions seem to be buttressed by the complaint filed in Adversary Action No. 83-0192-SW by the trustee in bankruptcy, in which he requested turnover of the sum of $27,000 from the dealer reserve account. But it is not the great magnitude of monies which may be in the account as of the date of bankruptcy which is determinative of the matter. In the case upon which the district court opinion is predicated, In re Amco Products, Inc., Civil Action No. 82-0227-CV-W-3 (W.D.Mo. July 25, 1983), there was some $32,162.52 in the account as of the date of bankruptcy. But, “(u)nder the dealer agreement between Bank and Amco, Amco had no right to withdraw at will.

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Bluebook (online)
49 B.R. 422, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 6283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blum-v-williams-in-re-blum-mowb-1985.