In Re Boehne

82 B.R. 525, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 65, 1988 WL 5638
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedJanuary 27, 1988
Docket18-21143
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 82 B.R. 525 (In Re Boehne) 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 Boehne, 82 B.R. 525, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 65, 1988 WL 5638 (Mo. 1988).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

FRANK W. KOGER, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter arose out of a Motion For Relief From Stay filed by the Boatmen’s Bank of Lockwood and vigorously opposed by debtors on the theory that the debt to the movant had been extinguished by actions of said movant prior to the bankruptcy. The Court has been unable to locate any cases directly in point and suspects that there are no Missouri cases directly in point. A brief history of the background follows:

Debtors were indebted to movant and movant filed suit in the Circuit Court of Dade County. Said indebtedness was secured by certain personal property. The suit was in two counts. Count I was for replevin. Count II was for a money judgment. Debtors apparently filed a counterclaim against movant. The end result of the aforesaid state court action was that, upon stipulation of the parties, a final judgment was entered on December 2, 1985, by the Honorable C. David Darnold, Judge of the Circuit Court of Dade County. That judgment awarded movant a judgment for possession of the personal property in Count I. That judgment also awarded movant a judgment for $69,661.61 together with interest from March 13, 1985, until fully paid, at the rate of 13% per annum, plus attorney fees of $1,500.00. The judgment in Count I, as well as the stipulation, ordered debtors to deliver possession of the personal property to movant, upon demand, after December 4, 1985. All costs were taxed to debtors.

There was conflicting evidence as to what occurred either as to demand by the movant or delivery by the debtors, but the Court finds that debtors did not deliver possession to movant as stipulated and ordered. Instead the aid of the Sheriff was invoked and after his intervention livestock was picked up, taken to the. sale barn and sold at public auction. However, the Sheriff was not involved in the actual taking or delivery of the property. No written notice of the time, date or place of sale was given to debtors. In addition there was substantial other personal property taken into possession by the movant, advertised in the Lake Stockton Shopper, and sold at private sale on sealed bids. The advertisement indicated the bidding process closed at noon on February 15, 1986. Again, no formal written notice of the time after which the property would be sold was given to the debtors. It appears that some $26,536.05 was realized from the respective dispositions of the livestock and other personalty.

Subsequently, movant discovered that debtors owned some real estate and on January 8, 1987, movant requested an execution on 120 acres of land located in Dade County, Missouri. That execution was *527 served on debtor, Judy K. Boehne on February 4, 1987. However, by Warranty Deed executed December 6, 1986, debtors had conveyed said 120 acres to C.R. Kaelke and Amanda E. Kaelke, husband and wife. C.R. Kaelke and Amanda E. Kaelke had deeded the property to debtors on September 21, 1982. The Kaelkes are relatives of the debtors and there was no consideration paid to either set of grantors at the time of either transfer.

Movant apparently geared up to start a fraudulent conveyance action under Mo.R. S. 428.020 and debtors filed their Chapter 13 proceeding on August 24,1987. Movant now wants to lift the stay to proceed with a fraudulent conveyance action in state court. Debtors, under the theory first announced in Missouri in Gateway Aviation, Inc. v. Cessna Aircraft Co., 577 S.W.2d 860 (Mo.App.1978), oppose the lift of stay. Debtors contend that failure to furnish notice of disposition of personal property under Mo.R.S. 400.9-504(1) et seq. prior to said sale has caused the movant not only to lose the ability to pursue a deficiency, but has in effect satisfied the money judgment and eliminated any real property lien that movant had on the 120 acres as a result of its money judgment of December 2, 1985. To paraphrase and summarize, debtors contend that movant sold personal property without notice and thus in a commercially unreasonable manner; that the sales satisfied the judgment since any balance unpaid would be the equivalent of a deficiency claim. That if there is no balance, there can be no pursuit of the real estate either by execution and levy or fraudulent conveyance action, ergo the Court should not lift the stay.

Although this argument is not without merit, it enlarges considerably the scope of both Gateway, supra, and Executive Financial Services, Inc. v. Garrison, 535 F.Supp. 263 (W.D.Mo.1982) affirmed at 722 F.2d 417 (8th Cir.1983) which are the only two cases cited upon the point by either counsel for the debtors or counsel for the movant. Frankly, the Court was not satisfied with the research done by either party and has perforce had to add its efforts to those of counsel. Hopefully those will result in an enlightened approach to the problems posed.

Notwithstanding the erroneous material in 10 A.L.R. 4th, under Improper Sale of Collateral —Judgment Bar, § 4, p. 423 and although Wirth v. Heavey, 508 S.W.2d 263 (Mo.App.1974) has never been explicitly overruled, it is well settled that the law in Missouri is that a deficiency remaining after sale of personal property securing payment of an obligation secured by said personal property may not be pursued if the sale was not conducted in a commercially reasonable manner; and that failure to notify a party potentially liable for said deficiency is per se proof of lack of commercial reasonableness, at least as to the unnoti-fied party. This is announced not only in Gateway Aviation, supra, and Executive Financial Services, supra, but also in Clune Equipment Leasing Corporation v. Spangler, 615 S.W.2d 106 (Mo.Ct.App.So. Dist.1981), and in Chemical Sales Co. v. Diamond Chemical Co., 766 F.2d 364 (8th Cir.1985) wherein the Court said at page 369:

“Therefore, any failure by defendant to give notice of the sale of collateral should preclude any recovery ... beyond the value of the collateral”.

However, that Court did hold that since the attempt to assert the deficiency in that case arose within the context of a counterclaim against an alleged conversion of the same personal property, the creditor was entitled to assert its deficiency against any finding of a value in excess of the sale price. For example, if the creditor were owed $100,000.00, repossessed the collateral improperly, sold it for $50,000.00, gave no notice to the debtor, and was subsequently sued for conversion, then the creditor could still assert the $50,000.00 deficiency against any value of the collateral found to be in excess of the sale price. Thus, the rule that this Court chooses to label as the “No notice — No deficiency” doctrine has at least one exception. Absent that exception, however, the Court can find neither a Missouri nor a Federal case in Missouri, that does not sustain the “No Notice — No Deficiency” approach. This Court, there *528

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 B.R. 525, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 65, 1988 WL 5638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-boehne-mowb-1988.