General Electric Capital Corp. v. Union Planters Bank, N.A.

290 B.R. 676, 49 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1298, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7790
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedJanuary 16, 2003
Docket4:01CV1183ERW
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 290 B.R. 676 (General Electric Capital Corp. v. Union Planters Bank, N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Electric Capital Corp. v. Union Planters Bank, N.A., 290 B.R. 676, 49 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1298, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7790 (E.D. Mo. 2003).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

WEBBER, District Judge.

Before the Court is Plaintiff’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment and for Appointment of a Special Master [doc. # 40], Plaintiff’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment On Conversion Damages [doc. #55], and Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment [doc. # 56].

I. Background facts

This is a secured transactions problem involving Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code, and the essential facts are undisputed. Machinery, Inc. (the debtor) owed money to both GE Capital and Union Planters Bank. In late November 1997, GE Capital entered into a Floor Plan Agreement with the debtor, promising to lend up to $5 million for the debtor to acquire certain pieces of aerial equipment called manlifters that the debtor would use as inventory in its equipment rental and sale business. In return, the debtor granted GE Capital a security interest in all the debtor’s inventory that GE Capital financed, whether then owned or after-acquired, as well as the proceeds of that inventory. 1 GE Capital filed UCC-1 financing statements describing the inventory and the proceeds in the appropriate state and county offices on December 29, 1997. The debtor had similar borrowing relationships with several other financial entities; the entities would loan the debtor money for the purpose of purchasing specific items of inventory and the debtor granted that particular creditor a security interest in the goods purchased.

Defendant Union Planters was also one of the debtor’s secured creditors. Union Planters had agreed to loan a certain amount of money to the debtor; in exchange the debtor signed various promissory notes, and gave Union Planters security interests in certain items of collateral. The record does not indicate when Union Planters began making loans to the debtor, but it is clear that loans had taken place for some time before March 3, 2000. As of March 1, 2001, there were 11 notes outstanding, and each note had a corresponding security agreement indicating which collateral secured which note. Of the 11 notes, 10 were loans secured by specific items of collateral and the proceeds from that collateral. The remaining note was a line of credit secured by all of the debtor’s inventory, accounts, and the proceeds therefrom. Each note gave Union Planters a security interest in each of the three *678 debtor’s bank accounts, and also gave Union Planters the right to “setoff’ against those accounts all sums owing under the promissory notes. Union Planters and the debtor agreed on the line of credit loan on July 5, 2000, and the original loan principal for the line of credit was for $1,250,000. Although the record does not indicate how, Union Planters asserts that they perfected all of their attached security interests, and GE Capital does not dispute that.

While Union Planters was one of the debtor’s creditors, it was also the debtor’s depositary bank. On April 10, 2000, Union Planters agreed to set up a Cash Management System for the debtor. The agreement set up three bank accounts: (1) a lockbox deposit account; (2) a payroll account; and (3) a general expense account. The Cash Management System contemplated that the debtor would deposit all of its receipts in the lockbox deposit account. When it came time for the debtor to pay its payroll or its general expenses, Union Planters would automatically transfer just enough funds from the lockbox deposit account into the other two accounts to cover the checks the debtor wrote for those expenditures. The payroll account and the general expense account were thus called “zero balance accounts,” because they only contained the exact amount of funds necessary to cover checks drawn on them, and the debtor never deposited any funds into them. If there were not enough funds in the lockbox deposit account to cover payroll and other business expenses, Union Planters would transfer funds into the appropriate account from the line of credit. In the end, if there were any funds remaining in the lockbox deposit account after the debtor paid its payroll and business expenses, Union Planters automatically transferred or swept those funds from the lockbox deposit account to itself to reduce the principal balance on the line of credit the debtor owed Union Planters. All of the funds the debtor deposited into the lockbox deposit account were commingled. The debtor did not in any way segregate the collateral proceeds according to their source or secured creditor; neither GE Capital nor Union Planters suggested that the debtor do so.

Beginning in March 2001, Union Planters terminated certain automatic features of the Cash Management System because the debtor was in default on its loans to Union Planters. Instead of automatically transferring money from the lockbox deposit accounts to the other accounts to cover any checks the debtor wrote, Union Planters required the debtor to provide a report of checks they wrote on the other accounts before Union Planters transferred the funds into the appropriate accounts to cover the checks. Union Planters still continued to sweep the excess funds from the lockbox deposit account to reduce the debtor’s principal balance on the line of credit.

Meanwhile, the debtor defaulted on its payment obligations to GE Capital under the Floor Plan Agreement around February 2000. On March 3, 2000, GE Capital and Union Planters entered into a Subordination Agreement. In that agreement, Union Planters acknowledged that its security interest in the debtor’s inventory or proceeds from the inventory was subordinate and junior to any security interest which GE Capital might have in the same collateral. 2 Even after the parties executed *679 the subordination agreement, neither GE Capital nor Union Planters discussed segregating the cash proceeds of the debtor’s equipment that GE Capital financed.

In March 2001, debtor defaulted on its Union Planters promissory notes. At this time, Union Planters continued to sweep funds from the debtor’s lockbox deposit account to reduce the debtor’s principal balance on the line of credit, as they had always done. On March 16, GE Capital sent Union Planters a letter notifying them of GE Capital’s superior interest in certain inventory and their proceeds and requesting that Union Planters turn over to GE Capital’s risk manager all of GE Capital’s collateral in their possession. The letter also asked Union Planters to turn over all GE Capital that might come in later, and requested a meeting between the parties and the debtor to determine if any of the money previously deposited in the debtor’s Union Planters bank accounts should properly be turned over to GE Capital. Union Planters continued to sweep funds from the debtor’s lockbox deposit account to pay itself back until the debtor filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on March 29, 2001. 3

In this lawsuit, GE Capital claims that beginning January 1, 2001, Union Planters’ sweeping of funds from the debtor’s bank account to pay down its line of credit was wrongful because it interfered with GE Capital’s first priority security interest in the cash proceeds of GE Capital’s collateral; their position is it was 'wrongful because Union Planters swept money that constituted proceeds from the sale or rental of GE Capital’s collateral.

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290 B.R. 676, 49 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1298, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-electric-capital-corp-v-union-planters-bank-na-moed-2003.