Chad Roy Clinkingbeard

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedMarch 30, 2020
Docket19-11605
StatusUnknown

This text of Chad Roy Clinkingbeard (Chad Roy Clinkingbeard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chad Roy Clinkingbeard, (Kan. 2020).

Opinion

es Ban kr xv Ye ey (ae 3 S| wr? □□ SO ORDERED. . \ ZINS Ze SIGNED this 30th day of March, 2020. Gs qe District □□

Robert E. Noceni United States Bankruptcy

DESIGNATED FOR ONLINE PUBLICATION IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS

IN RE: CHAD ROY CLINKINGBEARD, Case No. 19-11605 Chapter 11 Debtor.

ORDER DENYING HEARTLAND TRI-STATE BANK’S MOTION FOR RELIEF FROM STAY

Only the owner of personal property or the owner’s agent can grant a UCC Article Nine security interest in that property.! Members of a limited liability company have no interest in the LLC’s property, meaning that a security agreement executed by an LLC member in his personal capacity doesn’t grant a security

1 The Revised Uniform Commercial Code, Art. 9—Secured Transactions, as adopted in Kansas, is codified at KAN. STAT. ANN. § 84-9-101 e¢ seg. (2019 Supp.).

interest in specific LLC property. When Heartland Tri State Bank made a loan to Chad Clinkingbeard to be secured by a truck, it applied for a secured title in the name of his solely-owned LLC, ROJO Property Solutions. But Clinkingbeard

executed the loan documents as an individual. He didn’t own the truck, ROJO did. The Bank cannot be granted relief from the stay to “correct” the truck’s title based on the facts in this record.2 Facts3 Chad Clinkingbeard and ROJO Property Solutions, LLC each filed chapter 11 petitions on August 21, 2019. Clinkingbeard is the sole owner, member and

managing member of ROJO.4 In April of 2018, Clinkingbeard borrowed approximately $25,000 from Heartland Tri-State Bank. He signed a promissory note and a consumer security agreement purporting to grant the Bank a security interest in a “2011 Chevrolet 3500 HD 4x4 Diesel Pickup.” Clinkingbeard represented in the security agreement that he was the lawful owner of the truck. He signed both documents “Chad Clinkingbeard.” Neither signature was executed as a representative of ROJO. Nowhere in the loan documents is ROJO mentioned.

2 Heartland Tri-State Bank appears by its attorney David G. Arst. Debtors appear by their attorney Nicholas R. Grillot. 3 The parties submitted this contested stay relief motion to the Court on stipulations of fact (with supporting exhibits attached) and briefs. See Stipulations, Doc. 81; Heartland Tri- State Bank’s Brief, Doc. 84; Debtors’ Brief, Doc. 92. 4 The Court takes judicial notice of corporate resolution of ROJO showing Clinkingbeard as the sole member and managing member of ROJO. See No. 19-11606, Doc. 2. Clinkingbeard is the 100% owner of ROJO and signed ROJO’s Chapter 11 petition as the authorized representative. Doc. 1, p. 4 and p. 27-28, Question 28. On or about May 25, 2018, the Bank received a “Lienholder Copy” of the Title and Registration Receipt indicating that a Kansas electronic title covering the truck had been issued reflecting the Bank’s lien, but indicating that ROJO, not

Clinkingbeard, was the truck’s owner. The stipulations do not contain a copy of the Bank’s application for secured title. The temporal sequence hints this being a purchase money loan, but the stipulations don’t say. Nor do they explain how the truck came to be titled in ROJO’s name. Sometime before the bankruptcy cases were filed, the Bank repossessed the truck and still has it. The Court takes judicial notice of Clinkingbeard’s bankruptcy

schedules. They don’t list this vehicle and the Bank is scheduled as having one of the 20 largest unsecured claims (and also on Schedule E/F) for a “deficiency amount on repossessed 2011 Chevrolet 3500.”5 In answer to question 10 of his statement of financial affairs (SOFA), Clinkingbeard reports that the Bank repossessed the truck.6 ROJO’s schedules and statement of financial affairs are silent concerning the truck and the debt. The Bank seeks stay relief so it can file “the attached Affidavit of Correction” with the Kansas Department of Revenue to correct the

“incorrectly issued [title] in the name of ROJO.”7 The affidavit was not attached to the motion.8 The Bank filed this motion in Clinkingbeard’s case and Clinkingbeard objected, arguing that the Bank’s security interest never attached because

5 Doc.1, p. 9, 38. 6 Doc. 1, p. 55. Question 10 asks “Within 1 year before your filed for bankruptcy, was any of your property repossessed…?” 7 Doc. 54. 8 Id. Clinkingbeard did not own the vehicle and, even if he did, that the Bank’s lien neither attached to the truck nor is it properly perfected because the security agreement signed by Clinkingbeard contains an erroneous VIN (Vehicle

Identification Number) for the truck.9 Analysis Clinkingbeard challenges both attachment and perfection of the security interest granted to the Bank. First, because he didn’t own the truck, Clinkingbeard lacked any interest in the collateral and couldn’t grant a security interest in it. Second, because the truck’s VIN is incorrect on the security agreement, it is

inadequately described, further defeating attachment. Finally, the erroneous VIN would defeat a lien search of the Kansas Department of Revenue, Division of Vehicle (DOV) records, making the alleged security interest unperfected. Burdens of Proof The Bank seeks stay relief “for cause” under § 362(d)(1). Under that subsection, cause is not statutorily defined, but may include the lack of adequate protection of movant’s interest in property, or other cause.10 The moving party bears

burden of showing cause exists, after which the burden shifts to debtor to show why the stay should remain in place.11 Before establishing “cause,” the creditor must

9 Doc. 63. 10 In re Carbaugh, 278 B.R. 512, 525 (10th Cir. BAP 2002) (cause under § 362(d)(1) not limited to lack of adequate protection). 11 In re Busch, 294 B.R. 137, 140-41 (10th Cir. BAP 2003). See also In re Gindi, 642 F.3d 865, 872 (10th Cir. 2011) (cause to lift stay determined on a case-by-case basis and is discretionary relief), overruled on other grounds, In re TW Telecom Holdings, Inc. v. Carolina Internet, Ltd., 661 F.3d 495 (10th Cir. 2011); In re Pederson, 563 B.R. 327, 334-35 (Bankr. D. Mont. 2017); § 362(g). first meet the “low threshold” of establishing a colorable claim of a lien on estate property.12 Here the Bank needed to at least show it possessed an interest in property of Clinkingbeard’s estate. It met that burden by showing Clinkingbeard’s

execution of a security agreement conveying an interest in the truck, combined with his statements in the statement of financial affairs, thereby shifting the burden to resist the relief to the debtor. Clinkingbeard’s defense is that he didn’t own the truck and therefore he had no interest in the collateral in which to grant a security interest. Attachment of Security Interest, KAN. STAT. ANN. § 84-9-203

A security interest in personal property attaches and becomes enforceable against the debtor when three things occur.13 The secured party must “give value;” the debtor must either have rights in the collateral or have the power to transfer rights in it; and the debtor must “authenticate” the security agreement—sign it.14 Though Clinkingbeard’s schedules and SOFA suggest he believed he owned the truck, nothing in the stipulations explains how it came to be titled in his company’s name rather than his own. For example, the stipulations don’t include a copy of the

Bank’s application for secured title, that would have been filed with the DOV to have its lien noted on the truck title. And, except for the court docket, the stipulations are the only record the Court has. The parties stipulate that the truck

12 See In re Castro, 503 F. App’x. 612, 615 (10th Cir. 2012); In re Old Cold, LLC, 602 B.R. 798, 825-26 (1st Cir.

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