Clayton v. Coast Trading Co. (In Re Coast Trading Co.)

31 B.R. 674, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5999
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Oregon
DecidedJune 16, 1983
Docket15-31766
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 31 B.R. 674 (Clayton v. Coast Trading Co. (In Re Coast Trading Co.)) 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
Clayton v. Coast Trading Co. (In Re Coast Trading Co.), 31 B.R. 674, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5999 (Or. 1983).

Opinion

FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS

FOLGER JOHNSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

In March, 1982, Coast Trading Company, Inc. (Coast) entered into contracts with plaintiff to buy white wheat from plaintiff F.O.B. destination. All wheat was shipped by rail before April 7, which was the date Coast filed its Chapter 11 petition. Two cars arrived on the 7th, but there has been no proof that they arrived after the filing of the Chapter 11. The other cars were delivered between April 8 and April 12 before receipt of plaintiffs written reclamation demand on April 12. Coast had resold the grain before shipment, and delivery was not to Coast but to the third party purchasers designated by Coast.

This Court has already held in other cases involving Coast that the seller loses a right to both the grain and the proceeds where it has been resold and delivered to a good faith purchaser in the ordinary course of business before receipt by Coast of the reclamation demand. Since all shipments fall into this category, plaintiff may not follow the grain, and the complaint has been dismissed as to all such purchasers. It is also conceded that plaintiff is merely a general creditor of Coast as to those shipments delivered before the filing of the Chapter 11.

Plaintiff seeks, however, an administrative'priority for those shipments delivered after April 7 on the ground that post-petition delivery created a post-petition debt. If Coast had elected, as a debtor-in-possession, to affirm the contract and thereby induced plaintiff after the filing of the Chapter 11 to ship the wheat, it would have been a post-petition debt entitling plaintiff at least to an administrative priority. It was merely happenstance, however, that it was a post-petition delivery because of the time it took the railroad. Both plaintiff and defendant Coast intended an earlier delivery and do not appear to have had immediate knowledge of delivery. Plaintiff may therefore have been unaware of the possibility of stopping the shipments in transit, and Coast may have had no adequate opportunity to reject the contract nor thought any specific reaffirmation appropriate if such contract was still executory. Coast had resold to third parties, most of whom had paid some 90% of the purchase price to Coast before delivery. The filing of the Chapter 11 prevented Coast, in turn, from paying plaintiff.

Thomas Clayton, manager of plaintiff, described his usual practice in dealing with Coast. When he starts to load a car he calls Coast which gives him a destination for the car. The car is sealed, and the bill of lading with estimated weight is sent to Coast. He expects a 90% advance within a week of shipment based on the estimated weight. The other 10% with adjustments is paid on final settlement which could be from two weeks to six months later. Where shipments are F.O.B. destination, Clayton is responsible for inspection fees and freight charges, but these are matters of final settlement and neither they nor an unexer-cised right of stoppage in transit create an executory contract where one would otherwise no longer exist.

Donald Kramer of Continental Grain, which also trades under the rules of the Portland Grain Exchange, testified that the party who has the bill of lading has the *676 right to resell, not only before delivery, but even before the 90% payment is made to the party who sold the grain to them.

Thus receipt of the bill of lading becomes the key factor. Under the Portland Grain Exchange rules the sale takes place at that time, and the buyer becomes immediately obligated to pay 90% of the estimated price to the seller. All bills of lading in this case were delivered to Coast or its designee prior to April 7, and only the intervening Chapter 11 prevented Coast from paying. The sale had taken place before the 7th, and it is immaterial that delivery and payment or final settlement might not occur until a later date. This was not a post-petition transaction between plaintiff and Coast, and plaintiff is not entitled to an administrative priority.

Even if the case was not decided on this last issue which was raised in recent rear-gument, the Court would still have to deny plaintiff an administrative priority. To be a post-petition obligation of the debtor-in-possession, the contract must still have been executory when the Chapter 11 was filed, and it must have been reaffirmed by the debtor-in-possession. Such reaffirmation normally needs the approval of the Court.

Some cases have held that if a debtor-in-possession accepts the benefits of a pre-petition contract, the debtor-in-possession will be deemed to have accepted the contract. In such a situation, however, priority should be limited to the benefit received, not to the entire contract price. Coast had resold the grain and received 90% of the price of most carloads before the Chapter 11. It is doubtful what benefit would accrue to Coast in reaffirming the entire obligation to plaintiff when there was so little still owed Coast. At the time neither party considered the possibility of an executory contract needing reaffirmation by a debtor-in-possession or that this might result in a post-petition transaction. There was no intent to make it such.

It would be absurd in a huge operation like Coast’s, scattered over several states, to hold that Coast would have to examine and apply to the Court for rejection of a large number of almost fully executed contracts before delivery of the grain within less than a week after the filing of the Chapter 11 or be forever deemed to have accepted the contract. This would be impossible and inequitable.

In the case of Union Leasing Co. v. Peninsula Gunite, Inc., 24 B.R. 593, 10 BCD 80 (Bkrtcy.App.R. 9th Cir.1982), the bankruptcy appellate panel stated:

“We perceive no meaningful difference between § 64(a)(1) of the former Bankruptcy Act and 11 USC § 503(b)(1)(A) of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978. Each section allows a priority to the actual and necessary costs and expenses of preserving the estate subsequent to the commencement of the case. Therefore, the body of law that grew up interpreting § 64(a)(1) has value as precedent in interpreting 11 USC § 503(b)(1)(A).” Id. at 80.

In the case of In re Mammoth Mart, Inc., 536 F.2d 950 (1st Cir.1976), the court stated the following:

“We begin with the premise that the theme of the Bankruptcy Act is ‘equality of distribution.’ ‘If one claimant is to be preferred over others, the purpose should be clear from the statute.’ Nathanson v. NLRB, 344 U.S. 25, 29, 73 S.Ct. 80, 83, 97 L.Ed. 23 (1952); see Sampsell v. Imperial Paper Corp., 313 U.S. 215, 219, 61 S.Ct. 904 [907], 85 L.Ed. 1293 (1941). To give priority to a claimant not clearly entitled thereto is not only inconsistent with the policy of equality of distribution; it dilutes the value of the priority for those creditors Congress intended to prefer.” Id. at 953.

Section 503(b)(1)(A) has as its purpose the goal of inducing a creditor to do business with .the debtor-in-possession. The facts of the Clayton case (and the

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31 B.R. 674, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clayton-v-coast-trading-co-in-re-coast-trading-co-orb-1983.