Huntington National Bank v. Tri-State Molded Plastics, Inc. (In Re Tyler)

23 B.R. 806
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida.
DecidedAugust 16, 1982
Docket17-19608
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 23 B.R. 806 (Huntington National Bank v. Tri-State Molded Plastics, Inc. (In Re Tyler)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huntington National Bank v. Tri-State Molded Plastics, Inc. (In Re Tyler), 23 B.R. 806 (Fla. 1982).

Opinion

ORDER ON VALIDITY, PRIORITY AND AMOUNT OF LIENS OF THE HUNTINGTON NATIONAL BANK AS OF THE TIME OF THE FILING OF THE PETITION BY TRI-STATE MOLDED PLASTICS, INC. INITIATING THESE PROCEEDINGS

JOSEPH A. GASSEN, Bankruptcy Judge.

This adversary proceeding was commenced by a complaint for relief from the automatic stay to permit plaintiff Huntington National Bank (“HNB”) to enforce its *807 security interests in collateral held by the debtor, or, in the alternative, for adequate protection. An agreed order authorizing use of cash collateral (C.P. No. 2) was entered on January 29,1982 and by that order a hearing was set for February 17, 1982 to show cause why the cash collateral order should not continue in full force and effect. Algemene Bank Nederland N.V. (Alge-mene), the largest unsecured creditor, filed its response to the order to show cause (C.P. No. 6) raising many objections, including the objection that not all of the prepetition security interests and liens of HNB were valid and perfected. Following a continued hearing on the order to show cause on February 26 and 27, an order was entered granting HNB’s ore tenus motion to amend its complaint to add a count for the determination of the validity, priority and amount of its liens (C.P. No. 8).

The hearing on validity, priority and amount was held on April 7, 1982. The significant facts have been stipulated to or are not disputed. At the time of the filing of its petition in bankruptcy the debtor, Tri-State, was indebted to HNB in the principal amount of $1,218,680.40 under a promissory note dated November 29,1978, a copy of which is attached to the complaint as Exhibit P. Tri-State was also indebted to HNB in the aggregate principal amount of $239,630.47 on a revolving line of credit with various promissory notes, copies of which are attached to the complaint as Exhibits Q through AA.

At this time Kyova Corporation, of which Tri-State is a wholly-owned subsidiary, was also indebted to HNB. (See order on validity, priority and amount of liens in Huntington National Bank et a 1. v. Kyova Corporation, Adversary Case No. 82-0092-BKC-JAC-A.) Kyova executed promissory notes, copies of which are attached to this complaint as exhibits A through O.

To secure all of its debts to HNB, TriState executed and delivered to HNB several security agreements, copies of which are attached to the complaint as Exhibits OOO, PPP, WWW, XXX, and YYY. These gave HNB a security interest in Tri-State’s accounts, equipment, inventory and tangible and intangible property, including after-acquired property. Financing statements, copies of which are attached to the complaint as Exhibits QQQ through VVV, were properly filed by HNB at that time. The balance of the indebtedness under the November 29, 1978 note (Exhibit P) was also secured by a mortgage. (A copy of the mortgage deed is attached to the complaint as Exhibit ZZZ). That mortgage secured no other indebtedness.

At the time these financing statements were filed the debtor was incorporated as Tri-State Moulded Plastics, Inc. On May 2, 1979 it filed a corporate name change, changing its name to Tri-State Molded Plastics, Inc. HNB knew of the change but did not file changed financing statements to supplement the earlier ones which had been filed with the Moulded spelling. There was no evidence of whether Algemene knew of the earlier spelling.

An information request by Algemene to the Ohio Secretary of State under the current name of the debtor (Tri-State Molded Plastics, Inc.), made in preparation for this trial, did not reveal any of the financing statements which had been filed under Moulded, but did locate the later filings made after the name change to Molded (Objector ABN’s Exhibit No. 1). Similar requests made by Huntington, also in preparation for trial, to the county recorders of Franklin and Urbana counties did reveal all filings under both names. (Plaintiff HNB’s Exhibits Nos. 2 and 3). There was no evidence that Algemene had made any earlier search or relied on the apparent absence of the filings which were, in fact, made under the Moulded spelling.

Algemene does not dispute that the security agreements were originally perfected but asserts that HNB’s failure to refile financing statements after the name change caused its perfection to cease as to those security agreements so that HNB loses its priority to the bankruptcy trustee.

While the facts involved are deceptively simple, this is a very difficult case to decide. The court concludes that Huntington is not *808 perfected as to collateral acquired by TriState after September 2, 1979 and that the trustee has priority over HNB as to this collateral.

All the determinative events occurred in Ohio and the parties agree that Ohio law is applicable. 1 There are two U.C.C. provisions adopted by Ohio in the Ohio Revised Code which are pertinent to the narrow issue of whether perfection continues despite the name change. Section 1309.39, (UCC 9-402) lists the formal requisites of a financing statement and provides in subsection (E):

A financing statement substantially complying with the requirements of this section is effective even though it contains minor errors which are not seriously misleading.

An amendment, effective January 1, 1979, applies the same standard to financing statements which cover collateral acquired under the original security agreement after a name change of a debtor. Section 1309.39(G), in pertinent part, provides:

Where the debtor so changes his name or in the case of an organization its name, identity or corporate structure that a financing statement becomes seriously misleading, the filing is not effective to perfect a security interest in collateral acquired by the debtor more than 4 months after the change, unless a new appropriate financing statement is filed before the expiration of that time.

Prior to this amendment, only case law dealt with the effect of a subsequent name change on perfection. In the absence of any other legislative expression, several cases applied the “seriously misleading” standard of subsection (E) to gauge the effectiveness of a financing statement which was incorrect following a debtor name change, as well as to gauge the effectiveness of newly filed financing statements. The amendment of subsection (G) now addresses the effect of a debtor’s name change on perfection. If (E) is now (subsequent. to the amendment) inferred to address the same subject, (G) becomes redundant. This court cannot apply an interpretation which makes a statute meaningless. Therefore it concludes that only the provisions of (G) are to be applied to evaluate the effectiveness of a financing statement following a debtor name change.

This distinction is material because (G) is more limited in scope than (E). Subsection (G) provides that if a name change causes a previously satisfactory financing statement to become seriously misleading, the financing statement is ineffective to perfect as to collateral acquired more than four months after the name change. This therefore affects after-acquired collateral only.

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23 B.R. 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huntington-national-bank-v-tri-state-molded-plastics-inc-in-re-tyler-flsb-1982.