First National Bank of Boston v. Computer Input Services, Inc. (In Re Computer Input Services, Inc.)

33 B.R. 292, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5386
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 20, 1983
Docket19-11521
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 33 B.R. 292 (First National Bank of Boston v. Computer Input Services, Inc. (In Re Computer Input Services, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank of Boston v. Computer Input Services, Inc. (In Re Computer Input Services, Inc.), 33 B.R. 292, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5386 (Pa. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION 1

WILLIAM A. KING, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

INTRODUCTION

Computer Input Services, Inc. (“CISI”) is a data processing company which filed a *293 voluntary Chapter 11 petition on March 31, 1983.

Prior to April 13, 1983, CISI operated a data processing service center for retail merchants who contracted with CISI to handle their VISA and Mastercard credit transactions. The operations of the so-called “credit card division” ceased on April 13, 1983, when the instant controversy arose.

At issue is the debtor’s Application for Authority to Settle an Adversary Proceeding with the First National Bank of Boston (“FNBB”). FNBB is a national banking association with its principal office in Boston, Massachusetts. CISI maintains two (2) bank accounts with FNBB. One of these is the account from which FNBB made disbursements to retail merchants who had submitted charge slips to CISI for collection processing (“The charge processing account”).

On April 13 and 14, 1983, FNBB made electronic disbursements from this account of $294,000.00 to various retail merchants pursuant to instructions on magnetic tapes sent by CISI to FNBB. These disbursements created an overdraft on CISI’s account of $292,196.00, which FNBB now seeks to collect by means of the above-captioned adversary proceeding.

CISI applied to this Court for its approval to settle the adversary proceeding with FNBB and three (3) parties objected.

The objecting parties are: (1) National Shoes, Inc.; (2) the Service Station Dealers Association of America; and (3) the Official Unsecured Creditors’ Committee.

National Shoes, Inc. and the Service Station Dealers Association of America filed official objections to CISI’s Application pri- or to the July *1, 1983 hearing. National Shoes, Inc. is a retail merchant serviced by CISI’s credit card division and holder of an unsecured post-petition claim against CISI. The Service Station Dealers Association represents seventy-seven (77) service station merchants who were serviced by CISI’s credit card division and hold unsecured post-petition claims against CISI.

At the July 7, 1983 hearing on the Application, counsel for both National Shoes, Inc. and the Service Station Dealers Association of America were present. Extensive testimony was given by the debtor concerning its operations. At the conclusion of the hearing, the debtor and the two (2) objecting parties of record were ordered to submit proposed findings of fact, conclusions of law, and memoranda of law.

CISI and National Shoes, Inc. filed the above-ordered pleadings, but the Service Station Dealers Association did not; instead, the Association, adopted by reference those pleadings filed by National Shoes, Inc.

The third objecting party, the Official Unsecured Creditors’ Committee, voiced an objection on July 18, 1983, eleven (11) days after completion of the hearing. Counsel for the Committee sent the Court a letter stating that notice of the hearing had never been received by the Committee and attaching an unsigned copy of the Committee’s objection.

The adversary docket shows that this objection was never filed by Counsel for the Committee. Hence, the objection of the Committee is not part of the official record in this adversary proceeding.

After review of the memoranda filed by the debtor and the two (2) objecting parties, the Court will grant debtor’s Application and permit the above-captioned adversary proceeding between FNBB and the debtor to be settled according to the proposed terms. Before discussing the proposed settlement agreement between CISI and FNBB, however, this Court will describe the business operations of the debtor in detail to show how the $292,196.00 overdraft in CISI’s account occurred.

FACTS

All of the retail merchants utilizing CISI’s services have charge slip processing contracts with CISI. These contracts are known as “Retail Merchant Agreements.” National Shoes, Inc. has such an “Agreement” with CISI, as do the various service *294 station dealers represented by the Service Station Dealers Association of America.

A typical charge card transaction was processed by CISI in the following manner: (1) An individual purchaser used Master-card or VISA to purchase goods or services from a retail merchant; 2 (2) the merchant forwarded the tissue charge slips to CISI for collection processing; 3 (3) CISI keypunched the information from the slips onto magnetic computer tapes; 4 (4) CISI tele-phonically transmitted the information recorded on the magnetic tape to First National Bank of Louisville (“Louisville”) at about 1:00 P.M. each business day; 5 (5) on the same day, Louisville credited CISI’s account for the gross amount of the recorded purchases and wire-transferred funds for that amount to FNBB, net of

(a) Louisville’s processing fee of 1.7 percent (1.7%);
(b) chargebacks to CISI’s account at Louisville for disputed credit charges and
(c) keypunch errors. 6

Also on the same day, CISI sent FNBB a copy of the magnetic tape with instructions that, after three (3) days, FNBB should disburse the funds from CISI’s account to those retail merchants involved in the recorded transactions. 7

Testimony from the July 7th hearing showed that funds wired to FNBB from Louisville were traceable to each individual transaction recorded on the magnetic tape. 8

FNBB used the New England Automated Clearing House Association (“NEACH”) to disburse money to the retail merchants. The disbursement process through NEACH took three (3) days. On the first day, NEACH credited money received from CISI’s account at Louisville to CISI’s account at FNBB. On the second day, NEACH received, by electronic transmission, the credit information which it needed for the following day’s disbursements. On the third day, NEACH disbursed money to the appropriate retail merchants and then electronically debited CISI’s FNBB account for the same amount. 9

CISI’s decision to discontinue the operations of its credit card division, and the ensuing events which occurred on April 13, 1983, came about as a result of recommendations made by an outside consultant. The consultant reported to CISI that the division was suffering losses and that its operations should be discontinued as soon as possible. 10 He also informed CISI that there were insufficient funds to cover the credit card charge slips which had been submitted to CISI for processing. 11 Based on this information, CISI discontinued the credit card division’s operations on April 13, 1983.

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33 B.R. 292, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-boston-v-computer-input-services-inc-in-re-paeb-1983.