Claar Cellars LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Washington
DecidedMay 14, 2020
Docket20-00044
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Claar Cellars LLC, (Wash. 2020).

Opinion

See & [$V LF Dated: March 13th, 2020 ey: oo ate wey Whitman L. Holt wes Bankruptcy Judge

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON In re: Case No. 20-00044-WLH11 CLAAR CELLARS LLC, Debtor. In re: Case No. 20-00045-WLH11 RC FARMS LLC, MEMORANDUM OPINION Debtor.

The Bankruptcy Code contains many sections providing broad and flexible powers for courts to deploy to facilitate the rehabilitation of a given debtor based on the context of that debtor’s case. Perhaps the most notable power (and probably the most incorrectly invoked) rests in Bankruptcy Code section 105(a)’s general enabling authority. There are myriad other broad grants of authority to be found, however, including in Bankruptcy Code section 363(b)(1). In these related cases, a dispute arose requiring exploration of the relief available under section 363(b)(1)’s generalized authority for a debtor in possession to “use” estate assets “other than in the ordinary course of business” subject to court approval. At the final hearing regarding the debtors’ motions to authorize the use of cash collateral, the court, among other relief, authorized over the objection of the debtors’ primary secured creditor the “use” of estate assets to allow the

MEMORANDUM OPINION Page 1

partial payment of certain prepetition debt one debtor owed the other. The following provides the basis for the court’s ruling.1

BACKGROUND & PROCEDURAL POSTURE

This decision involves the affairs of two related but nonconsolidated debtors in chapter 11 bankruptcy cases – Claar Cellars LLC and RC Farms LLC. Claar and RC are both owned by the Whitelatch family and are part of a commercial enterprise that operates approximately 130 acres of vineyards, producing wines from the White Bluffs region of Washington.2 Simplifying somewhat, the basic arrangement is that RC owns (or leases from a nondebtor trust affiliated with the Whitelatch family) and operates real estate on which several varietals of vinifera grapes are grown and harvested. Once RC picks the grapes, they are transferred to Claar. Claar then takes over the processing of grapes into finished wine and sells the resulting wine.

Pursuant to a grape purchase agreement executed in 1997 and since amended several times, Claar is obligated to repay RC for the grapes Claar receives. This economic arrangement has historically functioned in a fashion similar to a revolving demand note whereby a sum due RC is computed when Claar takes delivery of grapes and that sum is reduced as RC seeks repayment from Claar, which historically has roughly been on an “as needed” basis to enable RC to pay its separate expenses.

As of the January 9, 2020 petition dates for both debtors, RC asserts that it holds a secured claim of approximately $329,000 against Claar. After the petition dates, RC filed (then amended) a UCC-1 financing statement to protect its asserted security interest. RC contends this act is permitted under Bankruptcy Code sections 362(b)(3) and 546(b) in order to perfect or otherwise maintain lien rights arising under Washington state law.3

1 The court explained the general basis for this decision on the record at the final hearing, but also indicated that this opinion would follow to more fully develop the reasoning behind the court’s oral ruling. 2 The White Bluffs region is located north of the City of Pasco and is part of the very large Columbia Valley American Viticultural Area (or AVA) that encompasses much of the area in Washington State east of the Cascade Mountains. As of the date of this opinion, applications are pending for White Bluffs and other regions in Washington to be recognized with their own, unique AVA designations. See Sophia McDonald, 5 New Washington AVAs on the Horizon, SevenFifty Daily (Sept. 11, 2018), available at https://daily.sevenfifty.com/5-new-washington-avas-on-the-horizon/. 3 See RCW 60.13.038 (creating a lien for grape growers who deliver fruit to wine producers that “attaches to the vinifera grapes delivered, to the wine producer’s inventory, and to the wine producer’s accounts receivable”). Before their bankruptcy filings, Claar and RC both owed secured debts to HomeStreet Bank. HomeStreet’s prepetition collateral includes various personal property owned by both debtors as well as real property owned by RC and by the nondebtor Whitelatch trust. HomeStreet’s collateral includes “cash collateral” (as defined in Bankruptcy Code section 363(a)) held by each debtor entity.

After the bankruptcy filings, both debtors moved the court to authorize the nonconsensual use of cash collateral pursuant to Bankruptcy Code section 363(c)(2)(B). The motions sought authority for the debtors to spend HomeStreet’s cash collateral during the 2020 calendar year based on separate budgets containing monthly line-item expenditures (with permitted variances and roll-forward capacity as detailed in the interim and final orders). In general terms, HomeStreet’s cash collateral would be used (i) by RC to produce a 2020 grape crop and to maintain its real property, (ii) by Claar to continue to preserve, market, and sell bulk and bottled wine inventory, and (iii) by both debtors to fund expenses arising from these bankruptcy cases.

One line item crossing the two budgets represented proposed payments from Claar to RC on account of “vintage grapes.” Per the revised budgets presented to the court at the final cash collateral hearing, Claar proposes to make seven monthly payments to RC during 2020, resulting in an aggregate transfer of $163,235 on account of RC’s asserted prepetition secured claim – which represents just under 50% of the total claimed amount. Claar proposes to address the remainder of RC’s claim in the plan or claims-allowance process. RC’s budget and testimony at the hearing established that RC would be unable to operate its business postpetition (i.e., unable to complete the 2020 grape crop and maintain its real estate) if RC did not receive the budgeted postpetition payments.

HomeStreet objected to the proposed use of cash collateral for two main reasons. HomeStreet first argued that the debtors were not adequately protecting HomeStreet’s petition date interests in the two debtors’ property as required by Bankruptcy Code section 363(e). The debtors disagreed on the basis that the aggregate value of the property collateralizing HomeStreet’s loan substantially exceeded HomeStreet’s approximately $2 million claim.4 The court ultimately did

4 At one point HomeStreet argued that the adequate protection analysis must be performed on a precise, estate- by-estate basis, such that assets of a nondebtor entity or nonconsolidated related debtor could not be counted for purposes of establishing that a secured lender is adequately protected vis-à-vis a given debtor (in other words, HomeStreet maintained that only property belonging to Claar – not to RC or the Whitelatch trust – could be considered when determining whether HomeStreet’s interests regarding the Claar estate were adequately protected). The court rejected this argument for two reasons. First, this position is inconsistent with case law not need to resolve this question because RC proposed to grant an additional lien pursuant to Bankruptcy Code section 361(2) on otherwise unencumbered real estate owned by RC and recently appraised at $1.7 million (this property is generally called the “Taylor Flats” parcel). The court found that the value of the overall adequate protection package – all petition date personal and real property, plus Taylor Flats – significantly exceeded the amount of HomeStreet’s claim and hence the debtors satisfied their burden under Bankruptcy Code section 363(p)(1).

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