First State Bank of Abernathy v. Holder (In Re Nivens)

22 B.R. 287, 34 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1711, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 3621
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedJuly 30, 1982
Docket19-40886
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 22 B.R. 287 (First State Bank of Abernathy v. Holder (In Re Nivens)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First State Bank of Abernathy v. Holder (In Re Nivens), 22 B.R. 287, 34 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1711, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 3621 (Tex. 1982).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

BILL H. BRISTER, Bankruptcy Judge.

Arville Calvin Nivens and Danny Calvin Nivens, father and son, conducted a farming business as a partnership under the name of Nivens and Nivens. Each filed petition for order for relief under Chapter 7 of Title 11, United States Code, on March 18, 1982. The 1981 crop year was the last year in which they operated the farming partnership. As a result of the farming in the 1981 crop year they became entitled to receive “deficiency” payments totalling $36,648.70 and “low yield” or “disaster” payments totalling $912.05 from the Department of Agriculture under the 1981 support programs for upland cotton. The First State Bank of Abernathy (“Bank”), the Small Business Administration (“SBA”) and the trustee are competing for those government support payments, represented by checks in the possession of the trustee. The following summary constitutes the findings of fact after nonjury trial.

The bank had furnished the primary financing for the farming partnership during the years of its operations. At the time the petitions in bankruptcy were filed the partnership and the individual debtors were indebted to the bank in the principal sum of $243,369.85 on sixteen separate notes. Those notes were secured by liens on real estate and by security agreements against farm equipment and machinery, crops and livestock, as well as “all checks and income derived from farming.” The security agreements were evidenced by financing statements filed of record in the UCC records in the Office of the County Clerk of Hale County, Texas.

The debtor partnership had obtained additional financing from SBA. At the time the petitions in bankruptcy were filed the partnership and the individual partners were indebted to SBA in the principal sum of approximately $337,000 from loans made to the partnership by SBA between September 1979 and March 1981. SBA also holds liens against crops and farm equipment, but has subordinated its liens to those of the bank. No payments have ever been made on the SBA indebtedness.

The trustee has heretofore abandoned any claim of equity in and to the farm equipment, machinery, supplies, harvested crops, livestock and real estate. Some of the government support checks which are in issue in this proceeding were received by the debtors prior to the time the petitions in bankruptcy were filed and were turned over to the trustee by the debtors. The balance of the checks were received by the trustee after the bankruptcy petition had been filed. The bank claims that it has perfected liens under the Uniform Commercial Code against those government support checks by virtue of its lien against crops and, in addition, by virtue of its lien against “all checks and income derived from farming.” SBA also claims lien against the checks as result of its lien against crops, but recognizes that its crop liens are subordinate to the bank’s liens. However, because it is an agency of the federal government SBA claims that it is entitled to setoff its debt against the government payments, citing as basis therefor the provisions of § 553 of the Bankruptcy Code and 7 C.F.R. § 13.1, 1 et seq. (1981). The trustee challenges the entitlement of the bank and of SBA to those checks by arguing that Article 9 of the Texas Uniform Commercial Code does not apply to the claimed security interests asserted by the bank and by SBA, because the federal statute and the regulations provide their own perfection requirements. Alternatively he argues that if Article 9 does apply neither the bank nor SBA *290 properly perfected their respective security interests in the checks. The trustee contends that neither the Bankruptcy Code nor the statute and federal regulations provide SBA with right of setoff. Finally he contends that if the bank or the SBA prevail on their respective contentions they thereby would preferentially improve position within ninety days of bankruptcy in violation of §§ 547(c)(5) and 553(b) of the Bankruptcy Code.

Preliminarily the nature of, and bases for, those payments 2 should be addressed.

Producers of certain crops, including cotton, who meet all program requirements can qualify for disaster payments to help offset crop losses due to natural disaster or other causes beyond their control. The circumstances justifying the payments include inability to plant or produce a normal crop of cotton due to prevented planting and low yield because of drought, floods, excessive rain, hail, unseasonable frost, high winds, or other abnormal weather phenomena. Entitlement to payment can also be based upon a quarantine imposed by a county, state, or federal government agency which prohibits the planting of a crop or harvesting of a mature crop or which mandates destruction of a planted crop. In addition, low yield payments may result from crop damage or destruction due to severe insect infestation or plant disease, drifting herbicide, damage from livestock not under the control of the producer on the farm or by game animals such as rabbits and deer. In summary, disasters which are not within the control of the producer and which result in the inability of a producer to plant a crop or, if the crop is planted, results in a low yield when compared to the weighted average for that particular farm may entitle the producer to government subsidy payments in the form of “disaster” or “low yield” payments. Thus, the “yield” is the determinative factor for the subsidy payment.

The “deficiency” payments have nothing to do with the yield, but entitlement to those payments result when the price received for the crop is less than the target price which the Department of Agriculture determines for that particular crop. The national average price for the crop year is a factor which is considered in making the deficiency payment determination and thus the amount of the deficiency subsidy payment cannot be made until after the crop year has been completed.

As indicated above the bank and SBA contend that both the “disaster” checks and the “deficiency” checks are crops, substitute for crops, or “proceeds” of crops and thus the perfection by each of them of lien against “crops” effectively constituted perfection of liens against the subsidy checks. The trustee does not challenge the perfection by those creditors of a lien against “crops” under Article 9. First, he contends that Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code does not apply to the subsidy payments, because the statutes and the regulations which authorize “disaster” payments and “deficiency” payments provide a separate and distinct procedure for perfection of liens. In that regard he claims that 7 C.F.R. § 709.4 (1981), entitled “Execution of Assignment Form,” provides that an assignment 3 of the right to receive those monies must be made in writing on Assignment of Payment Form ASCS-36 and filed in the county office of ASCS prior to the time the county committee approves the making of the payment covered by the assignment. In this case the debtors had not executed Form ASCS-36 in favor of the bank or of SBA.

*291

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Bluebook (online)
22 B.R. 287, 34 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1711, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 3621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-state-bank-of-abernathy-v-holder-in-re-nivens-txnb-1982.