Farmers State Bank v. Miner (In Re Monson)

87 B.R. 577, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 901
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedMay 16, 1988
Docket14-42647
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 87 B.R. 577 (Farmers State Bank v. Miner (In Re Monson)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers State Bank v. Miner (In Re Monson), 87 B.R. 577, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 901 (Mo. 1988).

Opinion

ORDER ENFORCING ORDER OF JULY 5, 1985, AND ACCORDINGLY DIRECTING THE DEFENDANT TO TURN OYER TO PLAINTIFF THE SUM OF $60,157.66 PLUS INTEREST AT 9% PER ANNUM FROM MAY 3, 1984, TO DATE OF PAYMENT

DENNIS J. STEWART, Chief Judge.

The trustee in bankruptcy in this case has for some years resisted payment to the Farmers State Bank of some of the proceeds of sale of a certain tract of real property, which has heretofore been referred to as lot 38. This resistance has continued despite the fact that, in successive hearings held in this court and in a prior action in a state court of competent jurisdiction, the Farmers State Bank has *579 demonstrated beyond question that it has a valid and perfected security interest in these proceeds and that the balance due them on the obligation related to the above-mentioned lot 38 was such that it required payment of some of these proceeds to the bank. Accordingly, many years ago, on November 18, 1982, this court issued its judgment on the basis of a state court judgment directing the trustee to turn over the proceeds to the Farmers State Bank. 26 B.R. 11.

After this court rendered its decision following the decision of the state court— which the trustee had continually insisted that this court stand by and await, even as this court granted him repeated evidentiary opportunities 1 — the trustee, for the first time, raised the issue (which he had had the opportunity to raise countless times previously, both in the state court and in this court 2 ) that the Farmers State Bank, if it should receive the proceeds of sale of lot 38, would receive more than the balance due it. 3

It was improper for the trustee to raise such an issue on appeal, without filing, either as a counterclaim or as an action commenced by him, a claim which would enable the bankruptcy court to determine the values of the properties other than lot 38. Virtually no principle of bankruptcy law is more well-established than that which holds that a secured creditor may do as he pleases with his collateral so long as it remains outside a bankruptcy estate. A secured creditor may elect “not to prove (his claim) at all and rely solely on his security.” 3 Collier on Bankruptcy para. 57.07(3), p. 169 (14th ed. 1977). Further, if the secured creditor forecloses before the date of bankruptcy, the bankruptcy trustee may not, in the absence of proven fraud or other exceptional circumstances, quibble with the price which the property has brought on the foreclosure sale. In such an instance the secured creditor, at the time of bankruptcy, with respect to the property, “is only an unsecured creditor at the time of bankruptcy; (the statute empowering the bankruptcy court to value his security) does not, therefore, come into play; and, subject to the inherent equitable powers of the bankruptcy court to prevent or redress fraud, the bankruptcy court has no power to review the liquidation where the pledgee has proceeded in accordance with the valid contractual provisions.” Id., *580 para. 57.20(5.2), p. 341. The Bankruptcy Code “recognizes the right of a secured creditor to prove a general unsecured claim for any excess of the debt over the value of the property. It does not require that a mortgagee must establish the value of mortgaged property before he may foreclose such mortgage.” In the Matter of Hayes, 140 F.Supp. 444, 448 (D.Alaska 1956). See also In re Shaw, 16 B.R. 875, 876 (Bkrtcy.B.A.P.9th Cir.1982), to the effect that a bankruptcy court’s equitable powers may not be used to set aside a foreclosure sale which did not violate the automatic stay. And the more recent decisions of our district court are emphatic and wholly in accordance with this principle. See In re Taylor, Civil Action No. 82-00559-CV-W-5 (W.D.Mo. Oct. 18, 1982), holding that the bankruptcy court in this district has no right to render orders or judgments with respect to property which has been effectively foreclosed before the date of bankruptcy. In this case, certain property which the trustee contended was worth more than the $150,000 bid at the foreclosure sale was the subject of á foreclosure on October 17,1980, more than two months prior to the date of bankruptcy, December 29, 1980. 4

And the trustee made no timely effort, as he might well have done, to bring the allegedly excess value into the estate. He might have utilized the appropriate adversary procedures to contend that the transfer should be avoided as a fraudulent transfer under the then-existing doctrine of Durrett v. Washington National Insurance Company, 621 F.2d 201 (5th Cir.1980); or as a preferential transfer under the doctrine then set out in 4 Collier on Bankruptcy para. 547.14, p. 547-49, n. 7 (1983), to the effect that “under the Code ... the enforcement of a lien by sale prior to the petition does not prevent the trustee from avoiding the transfer of the lien as preferential.” If he had done so, he might himself have supervised a reselling of the property, or otherwise have gained any excess, so that he fulfilled his duty in seeing that the bankruptcy estate received its fair share of it. When this court has previously adverted to the trustee’s failure in this regard, he has stated that he timely objected to the allowance of the claim of the Farmers State Bank. But it is only rudimentary that the trustee cannot bring property into the estate by simply objecting to a claim. The claim itself is made with respect only to the general, unencumbered assets of the estate, and is not sufficient to reclaim specific property or its proceeds from the estate. 5 In order to accomplish that purpose, the secured creditor must file a complaint for reclamation, 6 which the Farmers State Bank did in the case at bar, only to find the trustee willing to permit the case to be tried and determined in a state court while he insisted that this court in the meantime take no action. Under such circumstances, when the trustee has stood mute while the secured creditor foreclosed the property outside the estate and otherwise established its right to the proceeds of its other collateral in the estate, his failing timely to file complaints leaves him with no legitimate means of even insisting that the secured creditor’s interest *581 in those proceeds be restricted to its deficiency. 7

On appeal, initially, the district court so held, affirming this court’s decision that the trustee had not timely exerted the rights of the estate, albeit on slightly different grounds than those upon which this court had held against the trustee. 8 On the trustee’s motion for reconsideration, however, the district court, seemingly as a matter of grace than of right, seized upon this court’s comment that it would constitute contempt for the bank not to turn over estate property in response to a proper turnover complaint filed by the trustee 9

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Bluebook (online)
87 B.R. 577, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 901, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-state-bank-v-miner-in-re-monson-mowb-1988.