In Re Beeman

224 B.R. 420, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 1131, 33 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 194, 1998 WL 564329
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedSeptember 3, 1998
Docket18-61264
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 224 B.R. 420 (In Re Beeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Beeman, 224 B.R. 420, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 1131, 33 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 194, 1998 WL 564329 (Mo. 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM ORDER

FRANK W. KOGER, Chief Judge.

Two matters are pending before the Court in this case. The first is the Motion for Order to Apply Funds filed by the Chapter 11 debtor, Harold Dean Beeman. The second is the Motion of the United States of America for a Court Order Directing Debtor to Sell His Real Estate and to Marshal the Funds Pursuant to Law and His Chapter 11 Plan of Reorganization filed by the Farm Service-Agency, an overseeured creditor of the debtor. For the following reasons, the Court grants the motion filed by Beeman and denies the motion filed by the Farm Service Agency.

Facts

Beeman, a farmer, filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on July 8, 1994. The Farm Service Agency is an overseeured creditor of Beeman holding a first deed of trust on each of three tracts of land owned by Beeman totaling 519 acres. Following a valuation hearing on April 20, 1995, the Court issued *422 an opinion on April 26, 1995, in which it valued the real estate at $418,000.00. The Farm Service Agency also holds a security interest in machinery, equipment and cattle owned by Beeman, however, it is in a second position behind. Commerce Bank, N.A. in this collateral. The Farm Service Agency filed a proof of claim for $828,073.89. In its motion, the Farm Service Agency admits that “[l]and prices seem to continue to increase.”

MFA Incorporated holds a second deed of trust securing about $10,500.00 owed by Bee-man. MFA Incorporated’s deed of trust covers a 92 acre tract of land owned by Beeman, which is subject to the Farm Service Agency’s first deed of trust. This is the only land owned by Beeman upon which MFA Incorporated has a lien.

Beeman’s Third Amended Chapter 11 Plan of Reorganization (the “Plan”), which was confirmed on March 1, 1996, provides, in relevant part, for the liquidation of all of his real estate over a specified period of time. The plan provides that Beeman shall sell 25% of his real estate within nine months from the date of confirmation, and thereafter sell an additional 25% of his real estate each year until all of the land has been sold. 1 According to the Plan, all of the proceeds from the sale of the real estate, after the payment of income tax and/or capital gains tax on the sale of the specific real estate and the expenses of sale, are to be paid to the Farm Service Agency to retire its real estate indebtedness.

During the summer of 1996, Beeman sold his home and 20.02 acres to his wife. After the sale was concluded, the Farm Service Agency received $60,000.00 on February 3, 1997.

On December 1, 1997, Beeman’s attorney sent a copy of a sale agreement to MFA Incorporated’s attorney and the attorney for the Farm Service Agency for the sale of the 92 acre tract of land upon which the Farm Service Agency holds the first and MFA Incorporated holds the second deed of trust. At that time the agreed upon price was $77,800.00, but it now appears that the price may have decreased to $75,000.00. The Farm Service Agency is requiring that all of the sale proceeds from the sale of this tract of land be applied to its real estate indebtedness before it will release its deed of trust on the 92 acre tract. MFA Incorporated is requiring that its debt be paid in full, then the remaining proceeds from the sale be paid to the Farm Service Agency before it will release its deed of trust on the land. The Farm Service Agency has suggested to Bee-man that he give MFA Incorporated a replacement lien on his remaining land, on mutually agreeable acreage, second to the Farm Service Agency’s first lien, but Bee-man will not do so.

Stuck in the middle of the two lienholders, on May 23, 1998, Beeman filed a Motion for Order to Apply Funds in which he asks the Court to resolve the disposition of the sale proceeds between the Farm Service Agency and MFA Incorporated. Beeman contends that he has been ready to complete the sale since November of 1997, but because of the stated positions of the two lienholders he has not been able to deliver title to the proposed purchaser. Beeman claims that he has made numerous attempts to get the Farm Service Agency and MFA Incorporated to agree to an escrow of the funds, but neither will agree to this procedure. Beeman requests that interest accruing to the Farm Service Agency and MFA Incorporated during the time of non-closure of the real estate transaction be abated, and that he be awarded his attorney’s fees caused by the delay in closing the sale.

A hearing was held on Beeman’s motion on July 7, 1998, after which the Court allowed the Farm Service Agency and MFA Incorporated additional time to brief the issue of whether marshaling of assets was appropriate in this case. Instead of filing a brief, on July 23, 1998, the Farm Service Agency filed a Motion of the United States of America for a Court Order Directing Debtor to Sell His Real Estate and to Marshal the Funds Pur *423 suant to Law and His Chapter 11 Plan of Reorganization. In summary, the Farm Service Agency contends that Beeman has failed to sell his real estate in compliance with the time provisions of the Plan; that as a result Beeman is in default of the Plan provisions; that the Farm Service Agency’s and MFA Incorporated’s debts are compromised; that Beeman does not have the clean hands necessary with which to request equity and his actions should not be rewarded; that Bee-man will be the only one who will receive an advantage if the Court allows the doctrine of marshaling of assets to be applied here; that Beeman is attempting to make MFA Incorporated an unsecured creditor by refusing to give it a replacement lien on additional real estate; and that Beeman should be required to give MFA Incorporated a substitute lien. The Farm Service Agency argues that as a debtor-in-possession, Beeman should be required to “marshal the funds” by first selling land upon which only the Farm Service Agency has a security interest before selling land upon which both the Farm Service Agency and MFA Incorporated have a security interest, therefore, as the senior lienor the Farm Service Agency will be paid first from the sale of all of Beeman’s real estate while MFA Incorporated will still retain its security interest in the 92 acre tract of land until all the land is sold.

On August 3, 1998, MFA Incorporated filed a response to the Farm Service Agency’s motion in which it reasserts its position that the sale proceeds should be used first to retire the approximately $10,500.00 debt to it with the balance of the proceeds being paid to the Farm Service Agency. MFA Incorporated contends that the Farm Service Agency is an oversecured creditor who will remain adequately collateralized if the sale proceeds are distributed as outlined above, and that this is a perfect case in which to apply the equitable doctrine of marshaling of assets. MFA Incorporated asserts that the focus of the equitable inquiry should be on the equitable treatment as between it and the Farm Service Agency, and that the inquiry should not be tainted by Beeman’s defaults under the Plan or whether Beeman does or does not have “unclean hands.”

On August 27, 1998, the parties filed a stipulation in which they agreed that oral argument would not assist the Court in this matter and that the case was ready for a decision and order. Accordingly, the Court is ready to rule both motions.

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Bluebook (online)
224 B.R. 420, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 1131, 33 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 194, 1998 WL 564329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-beeman-mowb-1998.