Borg-Warner Acceptance Corp. v. Lipscomb (In Re Lipscomb)

41 B.R. 112, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 5600
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedMay 29, 1984
Docket16-35740
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 41 B.R. 112 (Borg-Warner Acceptance Corp. v. Lipscomb (In Re Lipscomb)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Borg-Warner Acceptance Corp. v. Lipscomb (In Re Lipscomb), 41 B.R. 112, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 5600 (Va. 1984).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

BLACKWELL N. SHELLEY, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter came before the Court upon the filing by Borg-Warner Acceptance Corporation (Borg-Warner) of a complaint to determine the dischargeability of a debt owed to Borg-Warner by the debtor, Lawrence Augustus Lipscomb, III. This Court held a trial on the plaintiff’s complaint on January 19, 1984. During the trial the defendant moved to strike the plaintiff’s evidence, that motion as well as the plaintiff’s complaint was taken under advisement. After the submission of memoranda in support of their positions and after consideration thereof, this Court renders the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

The debtor was involved with the management of Lipscomb Brothers Lumber Company, Inc. (the “business” or “corporation”) from 1963 to the present. During the years 1963 through 1973 the business was run in partnership form, the principal partners being the debtor’s father, Lawrence Augustus Lipscomb, Jr. and the debt- or’s uncle. The business was incorporated in 1973 and the debtor served as president of the corporation from that time to the present.

Prior to January 1981 the debtor, on behalf of the corporation, entered into a line of credit loan agreement with Bank of Virginia. The line of credit was approximately $1,000,000, $400,000 of which was secured by a first lien against the business’s inventory and accounts receivable and approximately $600,000 of which was secured by a first lien on the business property of Lipscomb Brothers Lumber Company, Inc. and a second lien on certain apartment buildings.

In January of 1981, Borg-Warner made a business call on the debtor for purposes of investigating the possibility of extending credit to the debtor and the debtor’s busi *114 ness. In April 1981, the debtor requested of Borg-Warner a $700,000 line of credit. On April 9, 1981, Borg-Warner and the debtor on behalf of the lumber company entered into a credit arrangement and security agreement with addendum. The addendum specifically modified the line of credit under the agreement from $700,000 to $200,000. The addendum to the credit arrangement specifically reserved to Borg-Warner, the right to increase the line of credit to $700,000 if certain conditions were satisfied, one of which was, that Borg-Warner acquire a first lien on the debtor’s inventory and accounts receivable. Collateral for the initial $200,000 line of credit was a second lien on the business inventory and accounts receivable, a first deed of trust on 155 acres in Hanover County, Virginia, an assignment of life insurance, and the personal guarantee of the debtor and his wife. Prior to January 25, 1982 this initial line of credit actually reached $228,-000 as a result of Borg-Warner making certain interest payments to the Bank of Virginia on behalf of the debtor’s business- and after request by the debtor.

In November of 1981, representatives of Borg-Warner went with the debtor to the Bank of Virginia and had a meeting with officials at the Bank of Virginia regarding the corporation’s financial condition and status of the line of credit with the Bank of Virginia. The Bank of Virginia expressed concern about the line of credit, expressed a desire to get out of the inventory loan with the corporation, and told the debtor that the collateral securing the line of credit would be liquidated if the corporation could not make the required payments.

At this time the debtor requested that Borg-Warner increase the corporation’s line of credit with Borg-Warner from $200,000 to $900,000. As security for this new line of credit, the debtor offered to Borg-Warner a first deed of trust on the debtor’s residence, a first deed of trust on an apartment building, a second deed of trust on another apartment building, a first deed of trust on some other real property, a life insurance assignment, a second deed of trust on the business property, new personal guarantees from the debtor and his wife, and in addition, personal guarantees from the debtor’s father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Lipscomb, Jr.

In considering the debtor’s application for an extended line of credit to $900,000 representatives of Borg-Warner were supplied with statements of the debtor’s father’s financial condition on two different occasions. Financial statements given to Borg-Warner in April of 1981 and an updated one in September of 1981 demonstrated that the debtor’s father had a net worth of between $2 million and $2.5 million. Representatives of Borg-Warner testified that Lawrence A. Lipscomb, Jr.’s wealth was in very liquid assets. In addition to the personal guarantee of Lawrence A. Lipscomb, Jr., Borg-Warner believed that the debtor’s father would help oversee the successful operation of the lumber business and that the personal guarantee would be a sign of confidence in his son, both of which Borg-Warner considered important in determining whether to grant to the debtor and the business the $900,000 line of credit.

On January 25, 1982, the $900,000 line of credit was closed. At the closing of this new line of credit, $100,000 of the loan proceeds were given to the Bank of Virginia reducing their note and deed of trust on the business property from $600,000 to $500,000. In addition, approximately $350,-000 was paid to the Bank of Virginia to pay off the debtor’s line of credit secured by the business inventory and accounts receivable, thereby in addition to the above-mentioned collateral, giving Borg-Warner a first lien on the business inventory and accounts receivables as collateral for the $900,000 line of credit. Also as part of the closing of this new line of credit, proceeds were paid to the Bank of Virginia to catch up all delinquent interests owed to the Bank of Virginia. At the closing, representatives of Borg-Warner requested and received from the debtor what they believed to be the signed and notarized personal guarantees of the debtor’s father and mother.

*115 The debtor entered into this new agreement with Borg-Warner because the business was in need of additional financing and the Bank of Virginia was unwilling to extend its existing line of credit with the debtor and the business. Most importantly for the debtor and the business, Borg-Warner was willing to lend to the debtor’s business approximately 65% of eligible inventory and accounts receivable whereas the Bank of Virginia was only willing to lend the value of about 40% of the business’s eligible inventory and accounts receivable. Not only was the Bank of Virginia unwilling to extend further credit but was concerned about the status of its loan to the business and was threatening to liquidate the collateral securing that line of credit. After closing the line of credit Borg-Warner sent acknowledgements of the personal guarantees to Lawrence A. Lipscomb, Jr. and his wife. Some time in March 1982, Mrs. Lawrence A. Lipscomb, Jr. called a representative of Borg-Warner and told him that neither her husband nor she had signed the personal guarantees. On March 25,1982 representatives of Borg-Warner met with the debtor and at said meeting the debtor admitted that he had forged the signatures of his parents on the personal guarantees stating that he believed it was all he could do because without the expanded line of credit offered by Borg-Warner that the Bank of Virginia would liquidate the business.

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Bluebook (online)
41 B.R. 112, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 5600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borg-warner-acceptance-corp-v-lipscomb-in-re-lipscomb-vaeb-1984.