First National Bank of Indiana v. Gabonay

545 N.E.2d 1130, 29 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 934, 1989 Ind. App. LEXIS 1025, 1989 WL 134742
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 9, 1989
DocketNo. 20A04-8904-CV-147
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 545 N.E.2d 1130 (First National Bank of Indiana v. Gabonay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals 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 Indiana v. Gabonay, 545 N.E.2d 1130, 29 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 934, 1989 Ind. App. LEXIS 1025, 1989 WL 134742 (Ind. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

MILLER, Judge.

The First National Bank of Indiana [defendant/appellant] appeals the judgment entered in favor of several former employees [plaintiffs/appellees] of the defunct corporation of Gratzol & Nicodemus Roofing & Sheet Metal Co., Inc. [corporation]. The Bank seized the employees' corporation's property in satisfaction of debts-real estate owned by the corporation was seized pursuant to a mortgage and the corporation's personal property was seized pursuant to a properly perfected security agreement. The employees asserted unsatisfied claims for wages due from the corporation. Because the facts were undisputed the case was submitted to the trial court by cross motions for summary judgment.

The trial court found that, pursuant to IND.CODE 22-2-10-1, the employees' claims for unpaid wages-earned during three months preceding the seizure to the extent of $600.00 per worker-were superi- or to the Bank's secured interest in the defunct corporation's personal property-but not the real property. The court entered judgments accordingly in favor of several employees for the total amount of $6,518.36 to be satisfied out of the personal property of the defunct corporation. The employees raise crossg-error asserting their claims for unpaid wages should be superior to the Bank's interest in the corporation's real property as well. We reverse and remand with instructions the trial court grant the Bank's motion for summary judgment which establishes that the Bank's liens-on real and personal property-are superior to the employees' claims for wages.

Issue

Whether 1.0. 22-2-10-1 establishes that employees' claims for unpaid wages have priority over secured interests in real and personal property?

Facts

Gratzol & Nicodemus Roofing & Sheet Metal Co., Inc. was indebted to the First National Bank under a promissory note dated March 19, 1986. This debt was secured by the corporation's goods, equipment, fixtures, inventory, and accounts receivable. This security interest was properly perfected by filing April 18, 1984. First National also took a mortgage in real estate owned by the corporation and properly recorded it on March 24, 1986. The employees do not attack the validity of the Bank's liens, only the priority.

On October 28, 1987, the corporation ceased business and surrendered to the Bank the personal property securing the note. The corporation fired all the employees but failed to pay all the wages due. Some of the unpaid wages had accrued within the three months before the termination of the business. The employees made a demand upon the Bank for the payment of unpaid wages pursuant to I.C. 22-2-10-1.

Decision

This case involves the interpretation of 1.0, 22-2~10-1 which grants employees a preference over other creditors for unpaid wages in the event their employer goes under. It provides:

Hereafter, when the property of any company, corporation, firm or person, engaged in any manufacturing, mechanical, agricultural or other business or employment, or in the construction of any work or building, shall be seized upon any mesne or final process of any court of the state, or where their business shall be suspended by the action of creditors [1132]*1132or put into the hands of any assignee, receiver, or trustee, then in all such cases the debts owing to laborers or employees, which have accrued by reason of their labor or employment to an amount not exceeding six hundred dollars ($600) to each employee, for work and labor performed within three (8) months next preceding the seizure of such property, shall be considered and treated as preferred debts and such laborers or employees shall be preferred creditors and shall be first paid in full, and if there be not sufficient to pay them in full then the same shall be paid to them pro rata, after paying costs. (pertinent part only; emphasis ours)

The employees argue this section provides that their claims for unpaid wages have priority over all other claims including secured interests in personal or real property. The Bank asserts that, while this seetion grants employees' claims for unpaid wages priority over other unsecured creditors, secured claims remain paramount over wage claims.

Our supreme court addressed the present issue in interpreting a predecessor to the above statute.1 (Neither party asserts the predecessor statute(s) are distinguishable from the present statute with respect to relative priorities of competing claims/security interests. However, the employees seek to distinguish the statutes by distinguishing the events which trigger the statutes' operation.) The court held a claim for labor did not become a lien upon the assets of a defunct firm superior to the liens of prior existing security interests, but became merely a preferred debt, to be satisfied in preference to the claims of general creditors. McDaniel v. Osborn (1905), 166 Ind. 1, 75 N.E. 647.

The statute under serutiny today provides for a "preferred debt" not a "lien." The MeDaniel court noted that such a distinction makes a difference. It held:

There is a very clear and marked distinction between a preferred debt and a debt secured by a specific lien.: A general debt cannot become superior to another secured by a lien, unless expressly made so by a valid law; and, if a statutory lien is to be created, the language employed should be specific in declaring the fact, as well as the nature, character, and extent of such lien. MceDaniel, supra 166 Ind. at 6, 75 N.E. at 649.

Certain transactions are excluded from the application of article nine security interests. IND.CODE 26-1-9-104. Relevant to our analysis are 1) landlord's Hens {excluded by 1.0. 26-1-9-104(b)); 2) statutory liens for services or materials (exelud-ed by IC. 26-1-9-104(c))2 Landlord's liens are governed by IND.CODE 82-T-1-18 (lien for erops) and IND.CODE 18-1~7-88 (landlord liens). Mechanic's liens are governed by IND.CODE 82-8-3-1.3 These three statutes provide for lens, under appropriate circumstances, as opposed to "preferred debts."

[1133]*1133The employees rely primarily upon the case of Tell City Nat. Bank v. Wischer (1929), 90 Ind.App. 161, 168 N.E. 595 which recognized a limited exception to the McDaniel, supra, rule in interpreting another predecessor statute 4 to the one involved today. In Tell City, the bank made loans to a firm operating orchards with knowledge of the firm's failing condition. The loan agreement provided that warehouse receipts covering apples would be issued to the bank as soon as the apples were picked and put in storage. The bank then took the warehouse receipts with the knowledge the laborers' wages had not been paid.

We held the claims for wages were superior to the warehouse receipts. We held that a contrary result would:

under the circumstances such as here permit a crafty creditor to stand by and watch the laborers perform the labor which makes the security, and then supplant them in their equities and take from that which the Legislature clearly intended they should have. Id. 90 Ind. App. at 168, 168 N.E. at 597, 598.

In so holding, we were reacting to the peculiar equities of the case and did not intend to depart from the MceDaniel, supra decision. (We lacked the authority to overrule the McDaniel case because it was decided by our supreme court.) We noted:

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Related

First National Bank of Indiana v. Gabonay
562 N.E.2d 719 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1990)

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Bluebook (online)
545 N.E.2d 1130, 29 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 934, 1989 Ind. App. LEXIS 1025, 1989 WL 134742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-indiana-v-gabonay-indctapp-1989.