Harris Trust & Savings Bank v. Wathen's Elevators, Inc. (In Re Wathen's Elevators, Inc.)

32 B.R. 912, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5427
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 13, 1983
Docket19-40172
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 32 B.R. 912 (Harris Trust & Savings Bank v. Wathen's Elevators, Inc. (In Re Wathen's Elevators, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris Trust & Savings Bank v. Wathen's Elevators, Inc. (In Re Wathen's Elevators, Inc.), 32 B.R. 912, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5427 (Ky. 1983).

Opinion

REPORT OF THE SPECIAL MASTER

TO: THE HONORABLE EDWARD H. JOHNSTONE:

The undersigned is United States Bankruptcy Judge and duly appointed Special Master in this proceeding by order of court dated April 13, 1983. The Special Master’s charge, pursuant to the Emergency Rule of the District Court of December 22, 1982, was to tender proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law upon which the District Court, acting as court of original bankruptcy jurisdiction, can base a resulting order. They are.herewith respectfully submitted.

This proceeding is the first in which a sitting Bankruptcy Judge has also been appointed Special Master, and there is therefore no traditional form for reports such as this one.

There are at least two forms in which special masters and commissioners in state and federal courts, (and even some judges), *915 cast their “findings of fact and conclusions of law.”

One form commonly used in state courts is a rather mechanistic presentation of (a) findings of fact, and (b) conclusions of law, established as separate literary components, with each category containing a highly specific, usually numerically designated series of statements and applied legal rules, from among which presumably the reviewing court may pick and choose.

The other form is the simple legal essay, rather typical of published judicial opinions, which consists of a single organic document interstitially weaving together the facts and the law for the sake of reader attention and persuasion.

We have chosen the latter form. The relative complexity and sophistication of the litigation at hand does not lend itself to the neatly compartmentalized fact-finding and reasoning of the “laundry list” approach. We strain, as it is, for safe passage through the rocks and shoals between two monolithic and arcane code structures, the Uniform Commercial Code and the Bankruptcy Code. We have made a conscious choice between specificity and comprehension. Even in essay form, the subject of the work is difficult enough to understand.

Despite that disclaimer, however, our writings similar in form to the following “Memorandum Opinion” have been found adequate — at least as to form — to satisfy the appellate review requirement of “findings of fact and conclusions of law.”

The signature below indicates acceptance of sole responsibility for the content and analysis contained in the following Memorandum Opinion. The following is of course subject to acceptance, amendment or rejection, in whole or in part, at the pleasure of the District Court.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This class action seeks a declaratory judgment of the priorities of payment between the unpaid sellers of grain to a bankrupt elevator and a bank holding a prior security interest in the same grain. At issue is entitlement to the proceeds from grain sold under court order, $1,426,651.95. ■

The plaintiff in this action is the secured bank, Harris Trust and Savings Bank of Chicago, claiming under a 1979 security agreement with an after-acquired property clause. The defendant class represents the farmers who sold grain to Wathen’s Elevators, Inc., as yet unpaid, who assert state statutory rights to reclaim the cash equivalent of the grain. The scope of this class litigation is significant; the Wathen bankruptcy schedules list 378 purchase contracts with 330 unpaid farmers. We certified the class on January 20, 1983 and by this order will make disposition of virtually all of those claims. 1

The manner in which this dispute reaches us can be briefly described. Wathen’s Elevators, Inc., filed a Chapter 11 reorganization petition on May 12, 1982. The preceding month the District Court, ruling in an action involving the same substantive rights we now address, had ordered the perishable grain sold and the proceeds held by Harris until the conflicting rights were adjudicated.

The senior pending action was transferred to the Bankruptcy Court in April, 1982, after the filing of this complaint, to avoid essentially duplicative litigation. The bank promptly moved for partial summary judgment.

Thereafter, because of the jurisdictional lapse created by the Supreme Court opinion in Northern Pipeline Construction Co. v. Marathon Pipeline Co., 458 U.S. 50, 102 S.Ct. 2858, 73 L.Ed.2d 598 (1982), the District Court reassumed primary jurisdiction; the undersigned Bankruptcy Judge was appointed Special Master in this proceeding, and has formulated the findings of fact and conclusions of law contained in this opinion.

*916 The bank’s motion for partial summary judgment addresses two central issues: (1) whether a right of reclamation exists for the class or any of its members, and (2) the effect upon those reclamation rights, if any, of the prior security interest held by the bank. The answers to these questions require an analysis of the nature of the transactions that occurred — and there were several different types — and the status and rights of the parties to them, the elevator, the farmers and the bank.

I. NATURE OF THE PARTIES AND

THEIR CONTRACTS.

A. Wathen’s Elevators, Inc.

Wathen’s Elevators, Inc. is a grain dealership that purchases grain for resale. It is not, strictly speaking, engaged in the grain storage business; that is, it does not act as a commercial bailee for grain producers who choose to store grain at a central elevator, are given a warehouse receipt, pay storage fees, and can demand return of their grain at any time. 2 If Wathen were a mere bailee our inquiry would be greatly simplified. In the bailment situation, title to the grain always resides in the bailor, the farmer, and never passes to the elevator bailee. At distribution, bailed property is simply returned. 3

As a grain merchandiser, Wathen entered into three types of purchase transactions with producing farmers. (1) Cash sales occurred when delivery, establishment of the price, and payment to the farmer occurred simultaneously, and were mutually dependent events. (2) Wathen and grain producers utilized some type of credit sales most frequently. In these sales, goods were delivered to the buyer, but there was a time lag between delivery of possession and payment of the price. This category includes deferred payment contracts, in which the price was established at time of delivery but payment deferred to a later date, and deferred pricing contracts, in which grain was delivered but the seller had a certain period of time within which to establish a price based on market activity. (3) Finally, Wathen and some farmers entered into contracts to sell. Under this form of agreement, price was established at the time of the contract, but delivery was made due at some point in the future. The farmer is to be paid upon delivery in this type of contract, which makes it a hybrid variety of a cash sale.

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Bluebook (online)
32 B.R. 912, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-trust-savings-bank-v-wathens-elevators-inc-in-re-wathens-kywb-1983.