Hafer v. Ardmore Sales Co. (In Re Ardmore Sales Co.)

18 B.R. 985, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 4444
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 31, 1982
Docket19-11365
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 18 B.R. 985 (Hafer v. Ardmore Sales Co. (In Re Ardmore Sales Co.)) 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
Hafer v. Ardmore Sales Co. (In Re Ardmore Sales Co.), 18 B.R. 985, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 4444 (Pa. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

EMIL F. GOLDHABER, Bankruptcy Judge:

The issue at bench is whether the debtor’s landlords are entitled to relief from the automatic stay imposed by § 362 of the Bankruptcy Code (“the Code”) to permit them to terminate a lease they have with the individual who is the president of the debtor corporation and to evict the debtor from the premises. Although we find that the debtor wás not a party to the lease, we conclude nonetheless that the landlords are not entitled to relief from the stay because the debtor has at least a possessory interest in the premises. In addition, the landlords’ attempted termination of the lease was not valid under its terms. Furthermore, although we find that the president of the debtor corporation has the right to terminate the lease and evict the debtor, we conclude that, because the lease is valuable, the president is barred from terminating it because of the fiduciary duty which he owes to the debtor corporation.

The facts of this case are as follows: 1 On August 25, 1981, certain creditors of Ard-more Sales Co., t/a Tern-Tee Nuts (“the debtor”) filed an involuntary petition for a reorganization of the debtor under chapter 11 of the Code. The debtor filed a consenting answer to that petition on September 14, 1981, and has continued as debtor in possession since that time. Thereafter, Lee Molineux (“Molineux”), the president and the 100% shareholder of the debtor, sought and obtained court approval to be retained as the president of the debtor.

On November 23,1981, Clayton and Olive Hafer (“the landlords”) sent a letter to Mol-ineux giving notice of the termination of the lease between the landlords and Moli-neux of the premises which the debtor occupies as a store. 2 The creditors’ committee filed a motion to restrain the debtor, Moli-neux and the landlords from terminating that lease. At the hearing held on that motion, we concluded that, since the debtor had at least a possessory interest in the premises, the landlords would have to obtain relief from the automatic stay provisions of § 362(a) of the Code before they could proceed to terminate the lease and *987 evict the debtor. 3 The landlords accordingly filed the instant complaint for relief from the stay to which the debtor, through Molineux, filed a consenting answer. The creditors’ committee subsequently filed a motion to intervene as a party defendant, which motion we granted.

The basis of the landlords’ complaint is that the lease which they seek to terminate is not a lease with the debtor corporation but rather is a lease with Molineux as an individual and that the debtor only occupied the premises under an oral sublease from Molineux. Consequently, the landlords assert that the debtor has no rights under the lease and that, therefore, they should be permitted to terminate the lease and evict the debtor.

The creditors’ committee raises several defenses in opposition to the landlords’ complaint. The committee asserts initially that the lease was made between the landlords and the debtor corporation, not between the landlords and Molineux, individually. In support of this assertion, the committee points to the fact that, at the time the lease was executed, the debtor — -not Molineux— was in possession of the store premises. Furthermore, the rent due under the lease has always been paid by the debtor’s corporate check and the debtor initially listed the lease as one of its business leases in the schedules which it filed in the chapter 11 proceedings. Finally, the committee argues that the debtor could only act through Moli-neux in executing the lease because he is the sole shareholder and officer of the debt- or corporation.

While we agree with the committee that the debtor corporation could only act through Molineux, from the testimony we conclude that in this instance Molineux was not acting for the debtor in executing the lease but was acting for himself. Both the landlords and Molineux testified that they intended the lease to be between the landlords and Molineux, individually, not between the landlords and the corporation. Furthermore, the signature on the lease evidences that Molineux signed the lease as an individual and not as an officer of the debtor corporation. 4 In addition, the fact that rent was paid to the landlords by the debtor’s corporate check is consistent with the testimony of the landlords and Molineux that the debtor was subleasing the premises from Molineux on the condition that it pay the rent directly to the landlords. The fact that the debtor listed the lease as one of its assets in its schedules is also not inconsistent with a finding that the debtor is a sublessee of the store premises. Hence, we conclude that the debtor corporation is not a party to the lease and may not directly enforce the terms of that lease.

However, the committee also asserts that we should closely scrutinize the lease transaction in question because the parties thereto (the landlords and Molineux) are all insiders of the debtor corporation. 5 The *988 committee contends that any transactions involving insiders should be examined by the court to ensure that they were arms-length transactions. In the instant case, the committee points to the fact that the lease in question was made between Moli-neux and his grandparents, that Molineux was the one who initiated both the execution and the termination of the lease, and that Molineux intends to use the premises in question to conduct the same business as the debtor did, to Molineux’s own benefit and to the detriment of the debtor and its creditors. While we agree that contracts made by an insider of a debtor corporation may be subject to closer scrutiny by this court, we do not think that simply because a contract is made by an insider that contract should be modified by the court to benefit the debtor and its creditors. Only where there has been a breach of the fiduciary duty owed by the insider to the debtor in the execution or implementation of that contract would we foresee interfering with the contract rights of the parties thereto.

In the instant case, however, the creditors’ committee contends that Molineux did breach his fiduciary duty to the debtor corporation initially by making the lease of the premises run from his grandparents to himself rather than to the debtor corporation. By doing so, the committee argues, Molineux seized for himself an opportunity that was available to the debtor corporation thereby breaching his fiduciary duty as the sole shareholder and officer of the corporation. 6 We disagree with the argument of the creditors’ committee on this point because we find that there is no evidence to support a finding that the opportunity which Molineux took (i.e., obtaining a lease for the store premises) was available to the debtor corporation. Instead, all of the testimony on this point (by Molineux and by Olive Hafer) was that the landlords did not want to lease to the corporation and agreed only to lease the premises to their grandson, Molineux, who subsequently subleased the premises to the debtor corporation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 B.R. 985, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 4444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hafer-v-ardmore-sales-co-in-re-ardmore-sales-co-paeb-1982.