Earnest Reiter v. Habbo G. Fokkena

237 F.3d 938, 2001 WL 32743
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 16, 2001
Docket99-3951, 99-3954
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 237 F.3d 938 (Earnest Reiter v. Habbo G. Fokkena) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Earnest Reiter v. Habbo G. Fokkena, 237 F.3d 938, 2001 WL 32743 (8th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.

Debtors Kevin and Kenda Wedemeier (tenants) are Iowa farmers who leased non-residential farmland from Ernest and Louise Reiter, and from Arnold and Delores Bartz (the Reiters and Bartzes will be collectively referred to as “landlords”). Tenants filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition, and a dispute arose over the rights to the crops planted on the leased farmland. Trustee Habbo G. Fokkena appeals from that part of a final order 1 of the United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel which reversed the Bankruptcy Court’s valuation of landlords’ administrative claims for rent; the Reiters cross-appeal from that part of the Panel’s final order which affirmed the Bankruptcy Court’s grant of summary judgment to the trustee approving his avoidance of their landlords’ liens in tenants’ crop proceeds. We affirm the judgment of the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel.

In 1998, tenants leased 149.6 acres of farmland from the Reiters and 183 acres of farmland from the Bartzes. Both lease contracts were for a term of one year. The Reiter lease ran from January 16, 1998, to January 16,1999, with a total rent of $18,000, due in equal installments of $9,000 on March 1 and December 1, 1998. 2 The Bartz lease ran from March 1,1998, to March 1, 1999, with a total annual rent of $20,130: $4,500 due on March 1, 1998, and $15,630 due on November 15,1998.

Tenants paid the March installment due under the Bartz lease, but failed to pay the March installment due under the Reiter lease. Nevertheless, tenants planted crops on the leased land in May. On June 8, before any of the landlords perfected a contractual lien in tenants’ growing crops, tenants filed their bankruptcy petition. Tenants continued to care for the crops during the postpetition period and remained in possession of the leased farmland through harvest. Meanwhile, the trustee neither assumed nor rejected either of the two leases. Therefore, by operation of 11 U.S.C. § 365(d)(4), the leases were deemed rejected on August 7, 1998.

Thereafter, the First National Bank of Oelwein commenced an adversary proceeding to determine the priority of interests in tenants’ 1998 growing crops. In a court-approved settlement agreement, tenants, the trustee, and the bank stipulated (1) that tenants would be employed by the trustee to harvest the growing crops at the standard rate for such work; (2) that $34,538.25 in crop proceeds, representing the cash rent due the landlords, would be escrowed; (3) that tenants and the bank would waive all rights to escrowed funds; and (4) that the rights of the trustee and landlords would be preserved subject to later determination by the Court. The trustee filed a motion for summary judgment, seeking an order allowing him to avoid landlords’ liens in the crop proceeds, and determinations as to whether landlords would be allowed administrative claims for rent, and as to the value of these claims, if allowed. The parties stipulated that the trustee’s postpetition use of the leased farmland produced a tangible benefit to the bankruptcy estate, and that the leases specified reasonable rent for the farmland.

Following a hearing, the Bankruptcy Court granted summary judgnent to the trustee, holding that he was entitled to avoid landlords’ liens. The Court further concluded, however, that landlords were entitled to administrative expenses for rent. It calculated landlords’ administrative claims on a per diem basis by dividing the total annual rent due under each lease by 365, then multiplying that figure by the number of postpetition days (142) the *941 leased land was used by the estate to grow crops. Accordingly, the Bartzes were awarded $7,003.44, and the Reiters were awarded $7,831.30. 3

The Bankruptcy Appellate Panel affirmed the Bankruptcy Court’s grant of judgment on the lien-avoidance issue, but reversed the order as to the calculation of the landlords’ administrative claims, ordering the case remanded with instructions to determine separately the rental value of the land during the growing season and the non-growing season, to apportion the total rent appropriately between the two seasons, and to adjust the rental rate accordingly for the 142-day period.

Having reviewed the Bankruptcy Court’s findings of fact for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo, see In re Gateway Pac. Corp., 153 F.3d 915, 917 (8th Cir.1998), we conclude the Panel properly affirmed the Bankruptcy Court’s approval of the trustee’s avoidance of the landlords’ lien over the crop proceeds, see 11 U.S.C. § 545(3) (trustee may avoid statutory lien on debtor property to extent that such lien is for rent). The Reiters argue that the trustee should be estopped to exercise his section 545 power to avoid their liens because his deemed rejection of their unexpired lease is inconsistent with his retaining possession of and harvesting the crop. See 11 U.S.C. § 365(d)(1), (4) (where trustee does not assume or reject unexpired lease of nonresidential property within 60 days after order for relief, lease is deemed rejected and trustee must immediately surrender such property to lessor). We reject this argument. The trustee is authorized to take precisely these actions: although his duties involve performing the debtors’ obligation until rejection, once rejection occurs, whether by affirmative action or by operation of law, his duties also require him to preserve the estate. See Hossaini v. W. Mo. Med. Ctr., 140 F.3d 1140, 1143 (8th Cir.1998) (judicial estoppel is limited to those instances in which party takes position that is clearly inconsistent with its earlier position). Furthermore, landlords failed to seek the remedies available to them — e.g., filing a motion to compel turnover of the property, or filing a motion for relief from the automatic stay— upon the trustee’s failure to surrender the leased property immediately. Cf. In re JAS Enter., Inc., 180 B.R. 210, 216 (Bankr. D.Neb.1995) (estoppel unwarranted where debtor’s maintenance of possession of leased premises involved both debtor’s failure to surrender property in violation of § 365(d)(4) and landlord’s failure to seek prompt judicial relief), aff'd, 113 F.3d 1238 (8th Cir.1997).

As to the valuation of landlords’ administrative claims for rent, the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel was correct in holding that the reasonable rental value of the property used provides the measure of landlords’ administrative claim for rent. Given the intensive agricultural use of the land during the 142-day period, we further conclude that the Panel properly recognized that the estate “extracted nearly all of the economic value available from the land” during that time, and determine that the Bankruptcy Court’s computation method was inappropriate in this case because the reasonable rental value of the farmland was not constant during the entire lease term.

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237 F.3d 938, 2001 WL 32743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/earnest-reiter-v-habbo-g-fokkena-ca8-2001.