BNY Financial Corp. v. Masterwear Corp. (In Re Masterwear Corp.)

229 B.R. 301, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 85, 1999 WL 47710
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 1, 1999
Docket18-01691
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 229 B.R. 301 (BNY Financial Corp. v. Masterwear Corp. (In Re Masterwear Corp.)) 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
BNY Financial Corp. v. Masterwear Corp. (In Re Masterwear Corp.), 229 B.R. 301, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 85, 1999 WL 47710 (N.Y. 1999).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION REGARDING CROSS-MOTIONS FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT

STUART M. BERNSTEIN, Bankruptcy Judge.

Plaintiff BNY Financial Corporation (“BNY”), the debtors’ prepetition factor, commenced this adversary proceeding to recover sums allegedly due under the factoring agreement. The debtors denied liability, and asserted several counterclaims. Each party *304 subsequently moved for summary judgment, but preliminarily, the Court limited the motion to two issues: (1) are the debtors required to pay BNY a Minimum Volume Charge, described below, for 1998, and (2) did BNY violate the automatic stay or the postpetition financing orders by twice imposing an administrative freeze on the debtors’ bank account?

For the reasons that follow, the Court grants BNY’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the debtors’ contempt counterclaims to the extent that they are based on violations of the automatic stay. The remaining questions before the Court turn on material and disputed factual issues that preclude summary judgment.

BACKGROUND

A. The Prepetition Relationship Between the Debtors and BNY

At all relevant times, Masterwear Corporation (“Masterwear”) and its affiliated co-debtors were engaged in the manufacture and sale of men’s and boy’s dress and casual pants to retailers. On May 16,1991, Master-wear entered into an agreement with BNY to factor its accounts receivable (as amended, the “Factoring Agreement”). The Factoring Agreement (PX “1”) 1 provided, in pertinent part, that Masterwear would sell its receivables to BNY, (id., ¶ 1(a)), who would charge a commission of 0.75% on the face amount of each receivable purchased during the month. (Id., ¶ 4(b)(ii).) Although BNY assumed the risk of the purchaser’s solvency, its risk did not extend to returns or disputed invoices. (Id, ¶¶2, 10(c).) If a customer asserted a dispute or returned merchandise, BNY could charge back the amount of the affected receivable to Masterwear’s account. (Id, ¶ 7(d).) As a result, Masterwear repaid chargebacks on an ongoing and current basis.

The Factoring Agreement imposed a minimum commission, called a “Minimum Volume Charge.” (See id, ¶ 4(b)(ii).) Masterwear was committed to factoring at least $25 million in receivables each Calendar Year while the Factoring Agreement remained in effect. If Masterwear factored fewer receivables, BNY charged Masterwear the difference between the commissions on $25 million and on the amount of receivables actually factored. 2 Of importance here, Masterwear also had to pay the Minimum Volume Charge for the “Partial Last Year,” i. e., the calendar year in which the Factoring Agreement was terminated. For example, if the Factoring Agreement was terminated in February, 1997, Masterwear still had to pay the Minimum Volume Charge for 1997. The co-debtor affiliates guaranteed Masterwear’s obligations. (PX “3”.)

As discussed in more detail below, paragraph 9 empowered either party to terminate the Factoring Agreement. BNY could do so on 60 days written notice, except that it could terminate immediately upon the occurrence of certain enumerated events. Masterwear could only terminate the Factoring Agreement in any. year on the anniversary date, May 16. Further, Masterwear had to give 60 days prior written notice. In other words, if Masterwear did not send a written termination notice by March 17th, it could no longer unilaterally terminate the Factoring Agreement during that Calendar Year.

B. The Parties’ Postpetition Relationship

1. The Financing Orders and Letter Agreement

The debtors filed these chapter 11 cases on October 27, 1997. They immediately sought approval of a postpetition revolving loan agreement with Signal Capital Corporation (“Signal”). The application called for the “priming” of BNY’s prepetition liens pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 364(d). BNY initially objected, but subsequently entered into an October 31, 1997 letter agreement (the “Letter Agreement”) with the debtors and Signal. (PX “36”.) The Court entered Interim and Final Financing Orders (collectively, the “Fi *305 nancing Orders”), dated October 31,1997 and November 12, 1997, respectively, (PX “34” and “35”) which incorporated the Letter Agreement. 3

The Postpetition Agreements, inter alia, terminated the factoring relationship — BNY no longer “bought” the debtors’ accounts receivable. Instead, BNY became a collection agent for the debtors’ postpetition accounts receivable (the “New Receivables”). 4 The Factoring Agreement continued, however, to play a role in the new arrangement. The Letter Agreement states that the parties will continue to operate under the “mechanics set forth in the Factoring Agreement relating to the posting, collection and remittence of the New Receivables.” (Emphasis added)(PX “36”, ¶ 1.) The Final Financing Order provides that “the Debtors shall comply with the provisions of the Factoring Agreement relating to interest, commissions, late payment charges, disputes, returns, and chargebacks, except to the extent specified herein or superseded by the Debtors’ obligations to BNY under this Order.” (Emphasis added)(PX “35”, ¶ 17.) The Postpetition Agreements do not specifically mention the Minimum Volume Charge for 1998.

The parties agreed that BNY would deposit the proceeds of the New Receivables into the newly created, No. 2 account (the “Account”). BNY had limited setoff rights against the Account. The Letter Agreement states:

[BNY] shall establish a new account on its books which shall hereinafter be referred to as the “No. 2 Account”, which account shall be credited with the proceeds of all New Receivables. [BNY] hereby agrees not to offset against any monies credited to the No. 2 Account any liabilities or claims which existed prior to the Petition Date or which may come into existence after the Petition Date, other than the commission set forth in paragraph 3 hereof.

(PX “36”, ¶ 4.)

Finally, the Financing Order provided BNY with adequate protection against a diminution in its prepetition collateral and cash collateral. 5 First, the debtors granted BNY a first security interest, up to a maximum amount of $750,000.00, in the debtors’ “pre-petition and post-petition inventory and accounts receivable and the first proceeds and products thereof.” (PX “35”, ¶ 14(b).) Second, BNY received a lien, junior to Signal’s lien, in all other assets of the estates. (Id., ¶ 14(c).) Third, the debtors had to continue paying valid chargebacks, arising in connection prepetition, factored receivables, provided the cash was available under the Signal revolving loan agreement. (Id., ¶ 14(e)).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
229 B.R. 301, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 85, 1999 WL 47710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bny-financial-corp-v-masterwear-corp-in-re-masterwear-corp-nysb-1999.