Hassett v. Sprague Electric Co. (In Re O.P.M. Leasing Services, Inc.)

30 B.R. 642
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 6, 1983
Docket19-22564
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 30 B.R. 642 (Hassett v. Sprague Electric Co. (In Re O.P.M. Leasing Services, Inc.)) 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
Hassett v. Sprague Electric Co. (In Re O.P.M. Leasing Services, Inc.), 30 B.R. 642 (N.Y. 1983).

Opinion

DECISION ON TRUSTEE’S MOTION AND SPRAGUE’S CROSSMOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

BURTON R. LIFLAND, Bankruptcy Judge.

The instant litigation pits the reorganization Bankruptcy Trustee (“the Trustee”) of O.P.M. Leasing Services, Inc. (“OPM”) against one of OPM’s customers. OPM, an acronym for Other People’s Money, was the vehicle for one of the largest frauds in history. For further background information detailing the complexity, ingenuity, economic imperatives and often bizarre nature of the various OPM transactions including the ones in question here, see the Trustee’s Report filed with this Court on April 25,1983 pursuant to Section 1106(a)(4) of the Bankruptcy Code (the “Code”).

Essentially the same two parties are involved in two role reversal lease transactions. The issue of offset, ordinarily simple and governed by the cleavage date of the filing of a Chapter 11, is unduly complicated in this case by the pre-petition interaction of the parties under mutual contractual obligations. The debtor is a lessor under one lease calling for payment of a monthly rental net to it of approximately $11,000 and is a lessee under a second lease with an $11,000 monthly rental obligation to its transactional partner. The debtor’s rental payment obligations have not been fulfilled, and not surprisingly, the transactional partner has reacted post petition by not paying its lease obligation. Thus the spectre of pre-petition debt offset against post-petition obligation becomes our focus.

I. Background Facts

In 1978, O.P.M. Leasing Services, Inc., a major national and international computer leasing firm, and Sprague Electric Company, a manufacturer of. electrical equipment, entered into a series of computer leasing agreements. During the active term of these agreements, O.P.M. petitioned for relief from its creditors (“the Petition”) and permission to reorganize under the provisions of Chapter 11 of the Code on March II, 1981 (“the filing date”). The business relationship between Sprague and OPM has changed as a result of the Petition and the Trustee seeks from this Court an assessment of the current rights and duties of each party under certain of the abovemen-tioned rental agreements.

*644 The Trustee alleges that his rights in interest as Trustee to monies payable by Sprague on a lease entitled “Equipment Schedule 4” (“E.S. 4”) have been ignored by Sprague since the OPM petition was filed. According to the Trustee, Sprague has defaulted on its E.S. 4 obligation as of March 1, 1981 (the date when payments stopped), and is now liable under section 12.1 of the Master Lease 1 for the accelerated sum of payments withheld since March 1, 1981. The Trustee also claims all interest accruing from the date of default as well as damages and expenses incurred, including reasonable attorney’s fees. The Trustee filed a summary judgment motion with the Court alleging that there are no material triable issues of fact. By its cross-motion for summary judgment, Sprague sought, inter alia, dismissal of the Trustee’s complaint and entry of judgment in its favor.

The basis for the Trustee’s claim is that the withholding of payments due and owing on the E.S. 4 since the filing date results in a “post petition” debt to OPM. Citing Section 553(a) of the Code as the applicable section, the Trustee further claims that this post-petition debt is being impermissibly set off against claims by Sprague dating from the pre-petition period. In opposition, Sprague contends that Section 553 of the Bankruptcy Code does not apply because OPM had assigned its interest in the payments made on E.S. 4 to a commercial lender not in bankruptcy two years before the filing date, and therefore OPM no longer possesses any valid interest in these payments.

The parties evidence a general agreement as to the substance of transactions involved herein 2 . In 1978, Sprague was leasing a basic computer system from another leasing company. Sprague approached OPM in order to lease accessory equipment which would upgrade that system. Sprague and OPM agreed to an arrangement whereby OPM leased to Sprague the accessory equipment it needed to upgrade and, in turn, it promised to sublease Sprague’s basic system. The net effect was that Sprague gained the use of totally new equipment while paying only for the use of the accessory equipment. OPM presumably planned to reduce its liability as sublessee by placing the old Sprague equipment on the secondary leasing market, which consisted of those corporations with less complicated computer needs. Because the equipment became obsolete, such marketing became impractical.

The correlative monthly financial obligations of Sprague and OPM under the terms of E.S. 4 and the Sublease, payable over 52 consecutive months, were as follows:

Owed by:
Sprague to OPM -
Replacement Equipment.$11,770
Accessory Equipment. 1,927
$13,697
OPM to Sprague - Subleased Equipment.$11,770

Sprague was obligated to make all rental payments on E.S. 4 to OPM or OPM’s as-signee without offset pursuant to Section 11 of the Master Lease which was incorporated into the E.S. 4 lease.

A. The Loan Transaction

OPM’s business involved frequent and complex loan arrangements from which it would obtain computer purchase money. Its corporate growth and perceived success in the computer leasing field was tied to this financing, and it often utilized rental payments due and owing under existing *645 leases as collateral for the loans. In July, 1979, OPM gave a promissory note (the “Note”) for about $362,000 to Citicorp Industrial Credit Inc. (“Citicorp”), assigning E.S. 4 as partial collateral under a Security Agreement dated July 17, 1979. According to Section 1.08 of the Security Agreement, Citicorp became the assignee of OPM’s right to receive rental payments from Spra-gue, commencing with the payment due August 1,1979 “as security for the payment of all amounts payable under or in respect of the Note.”

Sprague gave OPM its Consent and Agreement to the Assignment (the “Consent”) reserving to itself certain protections for the remainder of the lease term. Chief among these protections was a guarantee of “the right to offset against each monthly [E.S. 4] rental payment ... an amount equal to ... rental payments payable to [Sprague] under the sublease agreement dated November 30, 1978”.

In August 1979, pursuant to the Security Agreement and its own Consent, Sprague began to pay the entire amount due under E.S. 4 to Citicorp. Citicorp would then remit to OPM each month the portion of the payment that was in excess of the amount necessary to service OPM’s loan obligation. This generally resulted in a credit of $11,770 to OPM. 3

As described earlier, OPM filed its Chapter 11 Petition on March 11, 1981. On December 8th of that year, the Trustee rejected the Sprague sublease pursuant to the provisions of Code Section 365(a).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 B.R. 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hassett-v-sprague-electric-co-in-re-opm-leasing-services-inc-nysb-1983.