Fundex Capital Corp. v. Balaber-Strauss (In Re Tampa Chain Co.)

53 B.R. 772, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 5175, 13 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 792
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 9, 1985
Docket19-35082
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 53 B.R. 772 (Fundex Capital Corp. v. Balaber-Strauss (In Re Tampa Chain Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fundex Capital Corp. v. Balaber-Strauss (In Re Tampa Chain Co.), 53 B.R. 772, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 5175, 13 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 792 (N.Y. 1985).

Opinion

DECISION

HOWARD C. BUSCHMAN, III, Bankruptcy Judge.

The Fundex Capital Corporation (“Fun-dex”) seeks an order pursuant to § 725 of the Bankruptcy Code (the “Code”) directing the trustee of Tampa Chain Company, Inc. (“Tampa Chain”) to turn over to Fundex a portion of certain inventory proceeds in an amount sufficient to satisfy Fundex’s secured claim, including attorney’s fees, costs, and charges allowed under § 506(b). The trustee, in response, seeks a marshaling order requiring Fundex to first proceed against Wolf and Rachel Reichard as guarantors of Tampa Chain’s debt to Fundex, and against the co-op supporting their guarantee, before proceeding against the debtor’s estate. In the alternative, the trustee, pursuant to a complaint, seeks an order equitably assigning Fundex’s rights to the collateral to the trustee in the event the trustee must satisfy Fundex’s lien out of the debtor’s estate. Trial was held on June 28 and July 1, 1985.

*775 I

Tampa Chain was founded some time prior to March 30, 1982 for the purpose of manufacturing jewelry. It started in business upon obtaining a working capital loan in the face amount of $194,760.00 from Fundex on that date. After deductions of $74,760.00 for interest at 20.85%, and of Fundex’ legal fees and filing charges, Tampa Chain received net proceeds of $118,-086.50. The loan was secured by a security interest in all Tampa Chain’s accounts receivables, inventory, tax refunds, machinery, and equipment. Written security agreements and Uniform Commercial Code financing statements were signed by Fun-dex and Tampa Chain and filed. Pre-Trial Order at 3-4.

The loan, however, was made, not on the strength of the collateral or in the expectation that Tampa Chain would successfully repay it, but on the protection afforded by the Reichard’s mortgaging their three bedroom co-op to secure payment of their guarantee of the loan. As Howard Som-mer, President of Fundex, determined at the time, Tampa Chain had no assets, other than a paltry $2,500.00 in a bank account, no operating history and no capital. He, therefore, approved the loan only upon receiving collateralized guarantees from the Reichards and after investigating a corporation known as M.C. Merchandising Inc. (“M.C.”). Rachel and Wolf Reichard are shown, by a stockholder’s consent form signed by them in 1982 in connection with the loan, to own 24% and 31% respectively of the issued and outstanding Tampa Chain stock. Joint Exhibit A item 4. Leslie Blond, Rachel Reichard’s brother, was stated to own 25%. 1 Wolf Reichard and Blond were officers of both Tampa Chain and M.C. and owned all of M.C.’s issued and outstanding stock.

Fundex’ investigation of M.C. revealed that the company was to be liquidated and that its record of business success was most tenuous. In the prior year, 1981, M.C. had incurred a 50% reduction in sales. A Dunn and Bradstreet report commissioned by Fundex revealed to Sommer that M.C. had defaulted on an outstanding obligation and that the creditor had foreclosed on MC’s collateral. Tr. at 16-17.

Despite these warning signals as to the financial strength of Tampa Chain and the operating history of its owners, Fundex agreed to make the loan to Tampa Chain after Sommer had inspected the Reichard’s co-op and received the consent of the co-op board and concluded that the co-op had an estimated value of $300,000.00. Tr. at 33. At the same time the loan was executed, Fundex received confessions of judgment from both the Reichards, as well as their pledge of stock of the co-op. In the pledge agreement, the parties agreed that upon default on the loan, Fundex could demand that the Reichards immediately vacate the co-op and relinquish their possession of it, and that Fundex could resort to summary proceedings if necessary to evict them. Fundex also had the right upon default to sell the co-op by a sale of stock and an assignment of the lease. Joint Exhibit A, items 8-15. Consistent with its reliance on the Reichard’s co-op for payment, Fundex did not determine if Tampa Chain bought the inventory or equipment it said it would buy with the loan proceeds, nor did it in any way monitor its operations. Tr. at 23.

Such a review in the first few months after the loan was made on March 30, 1982, although not required, would have revealed that its proceeds were largely diverted rather than used to obtain the machinery and inventory necessary for Tampa Chain to do business. By the end of June 1982, some 56% of the cash disbursements made by Tampa Chain (totalling $79,971.26) were to or for the benefit of Wolf Reichard, his wife’s brother, his friends, or M.C. He used Tampa Chain money to buy jewelry machinery in his own name, Tr. at 75, 99, to pay off personal debts, Tr. at 136-137, to give money to friends and to pay off M.C. obligations. Trustee Post-Trial Exhibit 1. As a result, Tampa Chain, in the first four *776 months of its brief life, had $23,000.00 in sales and had spent almost all of the $118,-000.00 advanced by Fundex. Tr. at 108.

In explanation of this strange behavior, Wolf Reichard claims that his capital contributions to Tampa Chain greatly surpass any withdrawals he made. Third-Party Defendant Post-Trial Memo at 2. He, however, made no such contribution during the first three months after the Fundex loan was made, during which time large sums were being withdrawn for non-corporate purposes and only $23,000.00 collected. Tr. at 108; Trustee Exhibit 3B. Ultimately, Reichard contributed up to approximately $261,000.00 2 Third-Party Defendant Post-Trial Memo at 2, and withdrew $82,459.55. Trustee Post-Trial Exhibit 2. But these later contributions did not right Tampa Chain’s ship. Throughout its history Tampa Chain expended some $315,000.00 of its funds for the immediate benefit of Reich-ard, his brother-in-law Blond, and other companies owned by this family and to their ultimate benefit.

Principal among these was M.C. Established to performed metallic labor for manufacturers, Tr. at 109, and operating out of the same premises as Tampa Chain, M.C. did not sell jewelry directly to customers. During the later half of 1982, M.C. had transacted about $6,300.00 in business, Tr. at 129-130, and was to be liquidated gradually. Tr. at 63. Nonetheless, Tampa Chain sold $770,000.00 of gold chain, the bulk of its inventory, to M.C., on a special long term repayment schedule of 10 months, in contrast to the ordinary 1-3 months credit it gave to its other customers. Tr. at 143-144.

In justification of this transaction, it is asserted that M.C., through Leslie Blond, wearing his hat as an officer and shareholder of M.C. rather than his hat as officer and shareholder of Tampa Chain, told Reichard, in his Tampa Chain role, that it had a potential customer for this inventory. Reichard also averred that Odena Marketing (“Odena”), the major creditor of Tampa Chain and supplier of the chains, knew of the customer, but carefully avoids claiming that Odena knew that of the transfer to M.C. Tr. at 144-147.

Rather than selling directly to the alleged customer, and despite the fact that M.C. did not ordinarily make such sales, Tampa Chain transferred the gold to M.C. The proposed sale did not occur, but M.C. did not transfer the inventory back to Tampa Chain. Instead, M.C. used it to secure a loan of gold material from which it would make chains. Tr. at 149-50, 158.

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53 B.R. 772, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 5175, 13 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fundex-capital-corp-v-balaber-strauss-in-re-tampa-chain-co-nysb-1985.