In Re Bigalk

75 B.R. 561, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 1022
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedJune 29, 1987
Docket19-40008
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 75 B.R. 561 (In Re Bigalk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Bigalk, 75 B.R. 561, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 1022 (Minn. 1987).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM TO ORDER OF MAY 22, 1987 RE: MOTION OF LANESBORO STATE BANK

GREGORY F. KISHEL, Bankruptcy Judge.

On May 22, 1987, this Court entered an order on the motion of Lanesboro State Bank, a secured creditor (hereinafter “the Bank”) for relief under 11 U.S.C. § 1201, and on Debtor’s responsive motion. This memorandum is entered to set forth Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law upon which the Court premised that order.

Debtor filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 12 of the Bankruptcy Code in this Court on January 9, 1987. He is a Fillmore County, Minnesota farmer. The Bank is one of his major secured creditors.

On January 29, 1981, Debtor married the formér Betty Pederson (hereinafter “Betty”), who is his wife at present. Betty’s deceased husband, Arlen Pederson, had been a Houston County, Minnesota farmer who had owned a 450-acre farm in joint tenancy with Betty and had accumulated a substantial amount of farm machinery and equipment. The Bank was a major secured creditor of Mr. Pederson and held security interests in all of his farm machinery and equipment. Mr. Pederson died in 1980. Betty filed an affidavit of survivorship to clear title to the farm but has never commenced proceedings to probate the Peder-son estate. After Mr. Pederson’s death, an employee of the Bank requested Betty to assume personal liability for the debts secured by the farm machinery and equipment now in her possession, as a condition of her retained possession and use of the equipment. Betty signed a note and an accompanying security agreement as requested and has signed renewal and extension notes on this loan, and notes for additional advances from the Bank, on a number of occasions since then.

After Debtor and Betty got married, they physically consolidated the farming operations in which they had engaged on their separate farms. They have never executed deeds, bills of sale, or other documents to evidence any transfer of ownership of their premarital real or personal property into any form of joint ownership. They have engaged in a combination of dairy and beef cattle farming and raising of cash crops, principally corn. They have worked each other’s land and managed livestock herds which one or the other of them brought into the marriage. Both of them have contributed their labor to the management of the consolidated operation since the marriage. Since Arlen Pederson’s death, Betty has jointly owned and managed a beef cattle herd with Wayne Howard, her son by another prior marriage.

In early 1987, Debtor, Betty, and Wayne Howard had an appraisal of all of their various farming equipment and livestock done, which resulted in the preparation of a written descriptive list of all of the items. 1 Debtor testified from this list under oath at the Meeting of Creditors in this case, as to the ownership of the equipment and livestock on his and Betty’s farms. Debtor identified those items which were his sole, *563 premarital property by marking them with a line after the item; he identified those items which were Wayne Howard’s separate, individual property with a “W” or a line before the item, in the left-hand margin. This list is an accurate representation of the number and variety of items which Debtor, Betty, and Wayne Howard owned as of the commencement of this case, as well as of the claims of each of them to sole ownership of the individual items as of that date.

Debtor’s and Betty’s financial dealings with the Bank are somewhat convoluted at first first glance, but after review take on a semblance of order. Betty remained solely liable on the debt of approximately $51,000.00 which she assumed from the Arlen Pederson estate; the Bank continued to renew that obligation and to extend additional credit to Betty individually until January 18, 1985. On that date, Debtor first signed a note making himself jointly liable on Betty’s pre-existing, premarital debt. The January 18, 1985 note was in an outstanding principal balance of $156,030.97, and was secured by a real estate mortgage on a portion of Betty’s farm granted on the same date and a security interest in personal property granted by Betty almost one year previously. On March 7,1985, Debtor and Betty executed a joint security agreement terming both of them as debtors, under which they granted the Bank a security interest in all of their inventory, equipment, farm products, and various rights to payment.

Over the period from December, 1980 through January, 1985, Betty gave several financial statements to the Bank in connection with renewals of prior credit and extensions of new credit. A summary of these financial statements and their asserted values for Betty’s equipment is as follows:

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None of these financial statements enumerated the specific items contained in the general category of farming equipment. On none of them did Betty make any statement denying or qualifying the implied assertion that she held a full ownership interest in all of the property scheduled. Betty individually received all of the consideration for renewals and new extensions of credit by the Bank up through and including the January 18, 1985 note. All of the new advances of credit granted by the Bank to Betty were intended by both the Bank’s officers and Betty for the maintenance of her farming opration via payment of crop and crop input expenses, purchase of additional equipment, payment of farm real estate taxes, the making of current payments on other farm-related debt, or for other purposes directly related to farming. Betty in fact used all proceeds from loans from the Bank for agricultural purposes with one exception, an automobile loan made to her shortly after Arlen Peder-son’s death, in a principal balance of $3,310.00.

Walter had no lender-borrower relationship with the Bank before March 7, 1985, when he took out a loan to pay off his outstanding debt to a local Production Credit Association. Betty also signed this note. Over the course of the next three months, Walter and Betty jointly executed another note in this line of credit and Walter individually executed three additional notes in this line of credit. In connection with the initial extension of credit on March 7, 1985, Walter gave the Bank a financial statement in which he scheduled a value for machinery and equipment of $17,-350.00.

As of March 9, 1987, Debtor and Betty collectively owed the Bank a total of $221,-129.35, in principal and accrued interest, of which $170,134.32 was attributable to Betty’s line of credit (on which Debtor is jointly liable) and of which $50,495.03 was attributable to Debtor’s line of credit evidenced by the five notes. In late 1985, Debtor terminated a milk assignment which had provided for monthly payments to the Bank from the proceeds of milk produced by him and Betty. Neither Debt- *564 or nor Betty have made any payments on any of this debt since mid-March, 1986.

Neither Debtor and Betty, nor Betty and Wayne Howard, have ever executed a formal partnership agreement establishing the legal terms and conditions of their joint farming activity. On March 7, 1985, Debt- or and Betty executed a “Partnership Authorization Certificate” on a pre-printed form supplied by the Bank.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 B.R. 561, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 1022, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bigalk-mnb-1987.