Burch v. Bonded Adjusters, Inc. (In Re the Consolidated Estates of Pelc)

34 B.R. 823, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6115
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Oregon
DecidedJune 1, 1983
Docket13-36860
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 34 B.R. 823 (Burch v. Bonded Adjusters, Inc. (In Re the Consolidated Estates of Pelc)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burch v. Bonded Adjusters, Inc. (In Re the Consolidated Estates of Pelc), 34 B.R. 823, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6115 (Or. 1983).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

C.E. LUCKEY, Bankruptcy Judge.

The trustee, Robert Burch, seeks to recover payments made to defendants as alleged voidable preferential transfers under 11 U.S.C. Section 547. Defendants Bonded Adjusters, Inc., Bay Orthopaedic Clinic, Dr. Vahoomani, Pacific Power and Light, and Warner Cable have entered into stipulated settlements with the trustee and these proceedings are now unresolved only as to alleged voidable preferential transfers to defendants Flaxel, Todd and Nylander, Attorneys at Law, Stampers J and J Tire Company (Stampers), and Spady and Carleton, Attorneys at Law. Defendants Stampers and Spady and Carleton filed a third party complaint against the debtors, Donald and Mary Pele. The debtors have claimed certain funds as exempt and have joined Han-num Datsun, Western Mercantile, and Pioneer National Title Insurance Company (P.N.T.I.) as third party plaintiffs under Rule 14 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Trial of the matter was held November 18, 1982.

The alleged preferential payments arose out of transactions relating to the sale of the debtors’ home in Coos County, Oregon in June of 1980 to Philip and Margaret Dahl. The title report at the time of the sale revealed 20 judgments against the Peles. Fourteen of the judgments were paid out of proceeds of the Dahls’ down payment for the property in June, 1980. The balance of the sale price was to be paid in installments due in June of 1981 and June of 1982. P.N.T.I. was the closing escrow agent for the sale and designated as collection escrow agent. A promissory note from the Dahls and a mortgage in favor of the Peles securing it were delivered into escrow as was a satisfaction of mortgage executed by the Peles. On June 17, 1981 P.N.T.I. disbursed the annual installment payment to Wood Products Credit Union, Bonded Adjusters, Inc., Security Bank of Coos County, Western Mercantile, and Stampers pursuant to escrow instructions executed in June of 1980. The parties which remain as defendants in this proceedings are Spady and Carleton, attorneys, and Stampers who have identical interests and who received $2,426.56 on June 24, 1981 from P.N.T.I. which payment is alleged to be preferential and Flaxel, Todd and Nylan-der, attorneys, who received $315.44 on June 21, 1981 from P.N.T.I. which payment is alleged to be preferential.

On June 19, 1981, two days after the above-mentioned disbursements by P.N.T.I., Donald and Mary Pele filed their joint, voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition. An order of discharge was entered on December 17, 1981 in their bankruptcy. In their Schedule B-4 attached to their petition, the Peles claimed the balance due from the sale of the property consisting of the June, 1982 installment specifying 11 U.S.C. Section 522(d)(5) as the statute giving rise to the exemption. The federal exemption scheme was still available to Oregon residents at the time the Peles filed their bankruptcy petition. The monies claimed as exempt were received by P.N.T.I. on June 22, 1982 and total $14,528.78. P.N.T.I. holds these funds subject only to P.N.T.I.’s cost of disbursement. No affirmative relief is sought by or against P.N.T.I. and P.N.T.I.’s sole obligation is to disburse the funds pursuant *825 to the order of this Court. Stampers, Western Mercantile and Hannum Datsun were to receive payment from the June, 1982 installment pursuant to the escrow instructions and were scheduled as creditors in the Peles’ bankruptcy.

Plaintiff-trustee Burch and third party defendants-debtors contend that the direction in the 1980 escrow instructions for disbursement of funds in installments in 1981 and 1982 was not an assignment of those funds or an assignment of the right to receive those funds but rather only a direction to a third party instructing it to pay certain creditors from a particular fund and as such was a revocable instruction. The trustee and the Peles deny that a transfer was made in 1980 when the escrow instructions were executed except to the extent of the down payment and contend that a transfer occurred in 1980 and 1981 only when and to the extent that creditors were actually paid. This would make the June, 1981 disbursement preferential and would subject all of the June, 1982 payment to Peles’ claim of exemption.

Defendants Flaxel, Todd and Nylander, attorneys, and Stampers, and Spady and Carleton, attorneys, contend with respect to the June, 1981 installment that the collection escrow instructions of June, 1980 to P.N.T.I. and supporting letters and documents constitute a transfer as of June, 1980 of a part of the Peles’ interest to the respective defendants under one or both of the following legal theories:

1. An assignment coupled with an interest and/or

2. Third party beneficiary contract.

Defendants Stampers and Spady and Carleton, attorneys, also contend that their knowledge and reliance on the execution of the escrow instructions further strengthens their position.

Third party plaintiffs Stampers, Spady and Carleton, attorneys, Western Mercantile, and Hannum Datsun assert a claim to the funds which were to have been disbursed by P.N.T.I. in June, 1982 under the terms of the escrow instructions contending that their interests in the funds were the result of a transfer which occurred in June, 1980 and not subject to a claim of exemption by the Peles under the same legal theories relied upon by defendants herein. Third party plaintiffs seek an order directing P.N.T.I. to disburse the funds it holds pursuant to the escrow instructions. Third party plaintiff P.N.T.I. takes no position with respect to the claims of the remaining parties.

The parties frame the issues for the Court’s determination as whether transfers from the debtors to defendants and third party plaintiffs were effectuated by the transactions involved in the sale of the debtors’ real property and creation of an escrow in June, 1980 and, if transfers were made, their validity, nature and extent.

The exhibits attached to the pre-trial order in this case establish the agreement for sale between the Peles and Dahls and the intent of the parties with regard to the judgments outstanding against the Peles at the time of the sale. They include the following:

1. The earnest money receipt and the amendment attached thereto provided “the necessary money to clear liens against property to be taken out of funds at closing, refer to preliminary title report dated May 30, 1980.” (2nd page of pre-trial order Exhibit “1”) Examination of the title report clearly shows that the down payment deposit funds at closing were insufficient to satisfy the judgments.

2. Letter from Attorney Rossi, representing Dahl, to Attorney Hogan, representing Pele, dated June 19, 1980 sets the following “conditions” to completing the sale:

b) “Preparation of irrevocable collection escrow instructions guaranteeing that Dahl payments will be used to pay off the Judgment.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 B.R. 823, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burch-v-bonded-adjusters-inc-in-re-the-consolidated-estates-of-pelc-orb-1983.