In Re American Home Furnishings Corp.

48 B.R. 905, 41 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 631, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 6345
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Washington
DecidedApril 11, 1985
Docket11-49846
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 48 B.R. 905 (In Re American Home Furnishings Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re American Home Furnishings Corp., 48 B.R. 905, 41 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 631, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 6345 (Wash. 1985).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION & ORDER

SIDNEY C. VOLINN, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. PRELIMINARY

This matter involves a contest for the debtor’s federal tax refund between a trustee in bankruptcy and a secured creditor. The basic issue is whether the creditor perfected its security interest by properly classifying or describing the tax refund in the financing statement as required by the Uniform Commercial Code.

Section 9.402(1) of the Uniform Commercial Code (RCW 62A.9-402 in this state) requires that the financing statement, inter alia, “contains a statement indicating the types, or describing the items of collateral ...” Section 9-105 provides definitions of specific types of collateral and provides an index referring to other UCC sections for definitions of further categories of collateral. One of these other sections, 9-106, defines or classifies property which would encompass a tax refund as follows:

“Account” means any right to payment for goods sold or leased or for services rendered which is not evidenced by an instrument or chattel paper, whether or not it has been earned by performance. “General intangibles” means any personal property (including things in action) other than goods, accounts, chattel paper, documents, instruments and money. All rights to payment earned or unearned under a charter or other contract involving the use or hire of a vessel and all rights incident to the charter or contract are accounts.

The question before us is the type or classification of a tax refund as it is defined by § 9-106 and the effect thereof on perfection of the security agreement and financing statement here involved.

II. FACTS

Creditors Joseph Chiprut and Harry Angel are former owners of the debtor corporation. They assert a perfected security interest in all remaining estate assets which includes $4,000 from the trustee’s sale of the corporate assets and a $52,000 tax refund received by the trustee in 1984. The trustee agrees that Chiprut and Angel are perfected in the $4,000 from the liquidated assets but denies that they are perfected in the tax refund.

The security agreement contained the following description:

In consideration of any financial accommodation given, to be given, or continued by Secured Parties to Debtor, and as collateral security for the payment of all debts, obligations, or liabilities now existing or herein after existing, absolute or contingent of the Debtor to the Secured Parties, including indebtedness evidenced by the Promissory Note attached hereto, herein called indebtedness, Debtor, pursuant to Revised Code of Washington, Code § 61A. (sic) 9-101 et seq., hereby grants the Secured Parties a security interest in all of the assets of American Home Furnishings Corporation, including but not limited to the following items: all inventories of furniture, other inventories, vehicles, accounts, fixtures, contract rights, lease rights, documents of title, instruments, chattel paper, other intangibles and also all the proceeds and products of said collateral and all increases in said property and all property of a similar nature hereafter acquired by Debtor, herein called collateral, (emph. supp.)

While the term “other intangibles” differs from the statutory “general intangibles,” for the purposes of this decision we treat the terms as equivalent.

The financing statement filed by these creditors described the collateral as follows:

All assets of American Home Furnishing Corp. including but not limited to: inventory, vehicles, accounts, fixtures, contract rights, lease rights, chattel paper *907 and all proceeds of said collateral and all additional assets of the corporation here-aftdj acquired, (emph. supp.)

Thus, while the security agreement designates contract rights and “other intangibles,” the financing statement, insofar as material here, alludes only to “contract rights;”

III. ISSUES

The'‘creditors base their claim to the ¿ax refund upon two arguments. First, they contend that a tax refund, while it is properly characterized as a general intangible, may also be characterized as a contract right; -since they specifically refer to contract rights in their filed financial statement they are perfected and entitled to the tax refund. Second, they contend that the security agreement expanded the financial statement to include the tax refund as a general intangible because the phrase “all proceeds of said collateral” in the financing statement is defined in the security agreement to include general intangibles.

The trustee’s contention is that the tax refund is not a contract right and only a general intangible as to which the creditor’s claim of security interest is unperfect-ed by virtue of its omission from the financing statement.

IV. DISCUSSION

A.

The . trustee’s claim to the tax refund arises through conjunction of provisions of the Bankruptcy Code and Washington’s version, of the U.C.C. Under the Bankruptcy Code 11 U.S.C. § 544(a), the trustee in bankruptcy has, as of the filing date of the petition^, the rights of a hypothetical lien creditor in all of the property of the debtor. White and Summers, The Uniform Commercial* Code, 2d ed., page 997. Pursuant to the provisions of RCW 62A.9-301(l)(b) an unperfected security interest is subordinate to the rights of a person who bé-comes a lien creditor before the security interest is perfected. If creditors Chiprut and Angel were not perfected as of the date of the filing of the petition in this case, the trustee must prevail over their claim to the tax refund.

*There are two aspects to perfection of a security interest. First, there must be compliance with the provisions of RCW 62A.9-203(1) by execution of a security agreement. No issue is raised in this case regarding the execution of a security agreement creating a security interest which attached to the collateral described in the security agreement. Second, as to third parties such as encumbrancers and purchasers, the security interest must have been perfected, as of the date the petition was filed, pursuant to the provisions of RCW 62A.9-302 through 306. Perfection in this sense means public notice. A security’interest that has attached is (with certain exceptions) perfected by filing a financing statement (RCW 62A.9-302(1)) with the appropriate public agency (RCW 62A.9-401).

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Bluebook (online)
48 B.R. 905, 41 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 631, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 6345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-american-home-furnishings-corp-wawb-1985.