Brandt v. Fleet Capital Corp. (In Re TMCI Electronics)

279 B.R. 552, 2000 WL 33727243
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California
DecidedApril 30, 1999
Docket17-50503
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 279 B.R. 552 (Brandt v. Fleet Capital Corp. (In Re TMCI Electronics)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brandt v. Fleet Capital Corp. (In Re TMCI Electronics), 279 B.R. 552, 2000 WL 33727243 (Cal. 1999).

Opinion

ORDER ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

JAMES R. GRUBE, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

Before the court are cross-motions for summary judgment in the above-captioned adversary proceeding, involving a dispute over debtor TMCI Electronics, Inc. (“debt- or”)’s tax refund for the 1998 business year. William A. Brandt, Jr. (“Trustee”), debtor’s Chapter 11 Trustee, and the Official Committee of Subordinated Debenture Holders (“Committee”), contend that the debtor’s bankruptcy estate is entitled as a matter of law to a tax refund pertaining to a 1998 consolidated tax return that the Trustee filed on behalf of the debtor and its subsidiaries. Fleet Capital Corporation (“Fleet”), the debtor’s largest secured creditor, contends that it is entitled to substantially all of the tax refund pursuant to its security interest in the general intangibles and after acquired property of both the debtor and its subsidiaries.

For the reasons discussed below, the Court finds that Fleet’s security interest in general intangibles attached to the subsidiaries’ proportional interest in the 1998 tax refund in the amount of $514,020.13, but did not attach to the debtor’s own proportional interest in the 1998 tax refund, calculated to be $15,024.88.

II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

There are no material facts in dispute. Debtor is the parent corporation, and the holder of all outstanding stock, of Touche Manufacturing Co., Inc., Touche Electronics, Inc., TMCI/Trinity Acquisition Corp.' dba Trinity Electronics, and Enterprise Industries, Inc. (hereinafter collectively referred to as “subsidiaries”). On March 2, 1998, the debtor and its subsidiaries entered into a Loan and Security Agreement with Fleet, pursuant to which Fleet obtained a security interest in, among other collateral, the after-acquired property and general intangibles of the debtor and its subsidiaries.

The tax year for the debtor and its subsidiaries is a calendar year, beginning *555 on January 1 and ending on December 31. Beginning in 1996, the debtor elected to file a single consolidated tax return on behalf of itself and its subsidiaries. During the 1998 tax year, the debtor and its subsidiaries suffered net operating losses totaling $7,766,965. Of this amount, $220,722 represents operating losses the debtor itself incurred, while the remaining $7,546,243 represents losses incurred by the subsidiaries.

An involuntary Chapter 7 petition was filed against the debtor in this Court on December 21, 1998, ten days prior to the end of the debtor’s 1998 tax year. The debtor proceeded to convert to Chapter 11 on January 29, 1999. The subsidiaries, in turn, filed their own voluntary Chapter 11 petitions after the end of the 1998 tax year.

On February 1, 1999, or shortly thereafter, William A. Brandt, Jr. was appointed Trustee for the debtor and all of the subsidiaries, with the exception of Enterprise Industries, Inc. On March 3, 1999, the Trustee filed a consolidated federal income tax return on behalf of the debtor and its subsidiaries for the 1998 tax year.

According to the 1998 consolidated tax return, the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) owed the debtor a refund of $529,045.01 attributable to carryback net operating losses incurred by the debtor and its subsidiaries. The IRS, in turn, issued a check in the amount of $529,045.01 payable to the debtor. The Trustee deposited these funds into a “Trustee Account” in the debtor’s name, where the funds currently reside.

III. SUMMARY OF LEGAL ISSUES AND PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS

This dispute involves whether, and to what extent, Fleet’s security interest in general intangibles attached to the 1998 tax refund.

It is well-accepted that the right to receive a tax refund constitutes a “general intangible.” See, e.g. In re Palmetto Pump & Irrigation, 81 B.R. 109, 111 (Bankr.M.D.Fla.1987). However, under § 9203(l)(c) of the California Commercial Code, a security interest can only attach to a piece of collateral once the debtor acquires “rights” in the collateral.

Section 552(a) of the Bankruptcy Code, in turn, provides that “property acquired by the estate or by the debtor after the commencement of the case is not subject to any lien resulting from any security agreement entered into by the debtor before the commencement of the' case.” Thus, for a creditor’s security interest in general intangibles to attach to a debtor’s tax refund, the debtor must have acquired “rights” in the tax refund prior to its petition date. If the debtor’s “rights” to the tax refund accrue, or “vest,” after its petition date, § 552(a) of the Bankruptcy Code terminates the creditor’s security interest in the tax refund and in any other property to which the debtor acquires “rights” postpetition.

With few exceptions, it is widely accepted that the right to a tax refund “vests” at the end of the tax year, since by that point “all events necessary to establish Debtor’s tax liability ha[ve] occurred;” the debtor’s tax liability is “fixed, albeit unliquidated.” In re Glenn, 207 B.R. 418, 421 (E.D.Pa.1997). See also In re Conti, 50 B.R. 142, 148 (Bankr.E.D.Va.1985); In re Thorvund-Statland, 158 B.R. 837, 839 (Bankr.D.Idaho 1993). The present matter, however, involves a situation where an involuntary petition was filed against the debtor ten days before the end of the tax year.

The Trustee and the Committee maintain that the debtor could have no “rights” *556 or “interest” in the 1998 tax refund until the end of the 1998 tax year. Prior to the end of the tax year, they argue, any right to a tax refund was too contingent or uncertain for Fleet’s security interest to attach. As such, the Trustee and the Committee contend that Fleet’s security interest did not attach to the 1998 tax refund because the debtor’s involuntary petition was filed ten days before the end of the 1998 tax year.

Fleet, in turn, asserts that pursuant to Western Dealer Management, Inc. v. England (In the Matter of Bob Richards Chrysler-Plymouth Corp.), 473 F.2d 262 (9th Cir.1973), each subsidiary of the debt- or has its own separate interest in the 1998 tax refund to the extent that each subsidiary’s net operating losses contributed to the tax refund. Fleet argues that since the subsidiaries all filed bankruptcy petitions after the end of the 1998 tax year, the subsidiaries’ interests in the tax refund “vested” prior to the subsidiaries’ respective petition dates. Hence, Fleet argues, its security interest attached to each subsidiary’s proportional interest in the 1998 tax refund.

In addition, Fleet contends that its security interest attached to the debtor’s own proportional interest in the 1998 tax refund on a pro rata basis, such that l/365th of the debtor’s interest in the tax refund vested each day in 1998 until the December 21,1998 petition date.

IV. STANDARD FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

Federal Rule of Civil Procedure

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279 B.R. 552, 2000 WL 33727243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brandt-v-fleet-capital-corp-in-re-tmci-electronics-canb-1999.