Daniel v. United States Dept. of Treasury (In Re R&T Roofing Structures & Commercial Framing, Inc.)

42 B.R. 908, 11 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 397, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 4981, 54 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6388
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Nevada
DecidedSeptember 20, 1984
Docket19-10542
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 42 B.R. 908 (Daniel v. United States Dept. of Treasury (In Re R&T Roofing Structures & Commercial Framing, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniel v. United States Dept. of Treasury (In Re R&T Roofing Structures & Commercial Framing, Inc.), 42 B.R. 908, 11 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 397, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 4981, 54 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6388 (Nev. 1984).

Opinion

ORDER

ROBERT CLIVE JONES, Bankruptcy Judge.

Introduction

The present dispute comes to the Court on the defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. For the reasons detailed below, the motion is denied.

Background

On 17 December 1982 the plaintiff, trustee of the Chapter 7 estate of R&T Roofing Structures & Commercial Framing, Inc., filed a complaint seeking the return of some $18,000 in cash levied on and seized by the IRS within 90 days of the debtor’s 9 January 1981 petition filing date. This levy was in satisfaction of a duly-noticed tax lien (perfected outside the 90-day peri *910 od) for unpaid employee withholding taxes, and dispossessed the debtor of what the trustee alleges to be the only asset of the estate. While not directly citing 11 U.S.C. § 547, the substance of the trustee’s complaint is based upon that section, which empowers a bankruptcy trustee to avoid preferential transfers to a creditor under specified circumstances, unless the transfer fits within one of the Bankruptcy Code’s 1 enumerated exceptions. § 547(b) and (c).

At the 6 September 1983 hearing on the motion the Court allowed and encouraged the trustee to amend his complaint so as to plead his § 547 cause with greater clarity and precision, and took under submission the defendant’s motion. To date, no amended complaint has been filed.

Discussion

Although phrased in terms of a Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(c) motion (made applicable to bankruptcy court proceedings by Bankruptcy Rule 7012(b)) the Service’s motion is essentially a challenge to the legal basis for the trustee’s complaint. As such it is more akin to and will be treated as a Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, even though an answer has been filed. Moxley v. Vernot, 555 F.Supp. 554 (S.D.Ohio 1982). 2 The trustee’s legal theory and the Service’s counter arguments are discussed below.

I.

The trustee alleges that each of the elements of a § 547(b) avoidable preference have been satisfied by the Service’s actions. These elements are; 1) a transfer of the debtor’s property, 2) to or for the benefit of a creditor, 3) on account of an antecedent debt, 4) made within 90 days of bankruptcy, 5) while the debtor is insolvent, 6) with the effect of giving the creditor a greater return on his claim had the transfer not taken place and had there been a Chapter 7 liquidation. As phrased by the parties, the contest does not center on elements one through five. The levy was a transfer in the Bankruptcy Code’s sense 3 of the debtor’s property 4 to a creditor 5 on account of an antecedent debt. 6 This transfer was made within 90 days of the date the Chapter 7 petition was filed, and while the debtor was insolvent. 7

Although the parties have not raised the issue, the satisfaction of § 547(b)’s “transfer” element may not be self-evident. While § 101(40) defines transfer very broadly 8 the use of “transfer” in the con *911 text of 11 U.S.C. § 548 (fraudulent conveyances) has recently been given a narrower reading by a panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. In In re Madrid, 725 F.2d 1197 (9th Cir.1984), the court held that the “transfer” of the subject real property did not occur at the nonjudicial foreclosure sale (conducted seven days before the debt- or/owper filed her Chapter 11 petition) but at the time the deed of trust was perfected. As the time of perfection was outside the one-year period for finding a constructively fraudulent conveyance the foreclosure sale was not subject to a § 548 attack. 9

In light of the Madrid case it might be argued that there was no transfer when the IRS, a secured creditor, enforced its lien by way of a levy, notwithstanding the plain terms of § 101(40). Just as the Madrid court concluded that “enforcement of a valid lien was not intended to be covered by § 548,” id. at 1200, so perhaps, it might be argued, the enforcement of a lien was not intended to be a preferential transfer. This view is given some support by the obiter dictum found in footnote 2 of the Madrid decision, which describes its holding as consistent with an earlier line of “preference” cases: 725 F.2d at 1201 n. 2. Footnote two’s persuasiveness in the present context, however, is questionable, when one notes that the three cases cited therein, all decided under former law, may not be applicable under current preference and transfer provisions.

The principle running throughout those cases is that enforcement of a valid lien within four months [the preference period under former law] of bankruptcy petition filing cannot be struck down as a preferential transfer where the lien was perfected outside the ... reach back period. No matter what enforcement mechanism was employed, transfer for purposes of the preferential transfer section occurred at time of perfection of the lien, and not at time of enforcement.

In one case, Clements v. Snider, 409 F.2d 549 (9th Cir.1969), there was no explicit discussion of the transfer or time of transfer issue; instead, the finding of a non-preferential transfer simply turned on whether the creditor’s debt was properly secured. By implication, the court held that repossession of the business property within the preference period was not voidable because the repossessing parties had properly secured the obligation outside the preference period. Presumably this was because the court believed the “transfer” (for preference purposes) occurred outside the preference period — when the chattel mortgage on the business fixtures and equipment was perfected.

Another case cited, DuBay v. Williams, 417 F.2d 1277 (9th Cir.1969), involved the question of a transfer’s timing when “floating liens” on after-acquired property are at issue. The Ninth Circuit employed what one commentator has labeled “The Abracadabra, or the Transfer Occurred Before It Occurred, Theory.” Countryman,

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42 B.R. 908, 11 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 397, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 4981, 54 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-v-united-states-dept-of-treasury-in-re-rt-roofing-structures-nvb-1984.