RALPH R. MABEY, Bankruptcy Judge.
INTRODUCTION AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
This case asks whether debtor, who is vendee under a contract for deed, has rights in an “executory contract” within the meaning of 11 U.S.C. Section 365.
Debtor is a debtor in possession under Chapter ll.
He is a broker and dealer in real property. His schedules show land worth $2,641,550, most of which has been bought or sold on contracts for deed.
Lewis and Edris Calvert (sellers) made a contract to sell land to debtor at a price of $97,200, with $1,100 down, and the balance payable over time with interest. Sellers must convey title .when debtor completes performance. They may forfeit his interest if he defaults. Debtor has resold the property, again using a contract, to a third party, John Collett.
Sellers moved for an order, pursuant to Section 365(d)(2), directing debtor to assume or reject their contract. Debtor demurred, arguing that the contract is not executory and therefore Section 365 is inapplicable. After denying the motion orally on the record, the court files this explanatory memorandum.
EXECUTORY CONTRACTS AND BANKRUPTCY POLICY
Sellers point to the definition of executo-ry contract formulated by Professor Countryman: “a contract under which the obligations of both the bankrupt and the other party to the contract are so far unperformed that the failure of either to complete performance would constitute a material breach excusing the performance of the other.” Countryman, “Executory Contracts in Bankruptcy: Part I,” 57 Minn.L.Rev. 439, 460 (1973).
This definition embraces the contract for deed, they maintain, because both sides have unperformed obligations,
viz.
payment by debtor and delivery of title by sellers. Failure of either to complete performance would constitute a material breach excusing the performance of the other.
Countryman propounded a definition of executory contract which was “functional,” that is, “defined in the light of the purpose for which the trustee is given the option to assume or reject. Similar to his general power to abandon or accept other property, this is an option to be exercised when it will benefit the estate.” Countryman,
supra
at 450. From this premise, he framed his test of performance due on both sides. If the creditor has performed, rejection would be meaningless, since “the estate has whatever benefit it can obtain .... and ... rejection would neither add to nor detract from the creditor’s claim or the estate’s liability.”
Id.
at 451. Assumption likewise would be meaningless, and further, would transform the obligation of debtor into a cost of administration, “a prerogative which the Bankruptcy Act has never been supposed to have vested in either the trustee or the court.”
Id.
at 452. If the debtor has performed, assumption adds nothing to his right to performance. Rejection, on the other hand, would not constitute a breach. In short, the Countryman test is an index to when assumption or rejection of a contract will “benefit the estate” and therefore of when a contract is executory.
Section 365, however, reflects a number of policies, including not only benefit to the estate but also protection of creditors. The Countryman test may often define the benefit to the estate, but does it always? And does it speak to the protection of creditors?
See
Julis, “Classifying Rights and Interests Under the Bankruptcy Code,” 55 Am.Bank. L.J. 223 (1981). These questions underlie the refusal of the Commission to define executory contract, Report of the Commission on the Bankruptcy Laws of the United States, H.Doc.No.93-137, Part I, at 199 (1973) (“any succinct statutory language risks an unintended omission or inclusion”), especially in relation to the contract for deed.
Sections 365(i) and 365(j), for example, give special treatment to nondebtor vendees of land sale contracts. They were passed in response to the plight of nondebtor vendees under former law. In
In re New York Investors Mutual Group,
143 F.Supp. 51 (S.D.N.Y.1956), the debtor had contracted to sell land to. a buyer for $105,000. There was a down payment of $15,000 with the balance due at closing in 18 months. Prior to closing, debtor was adjudicated bankrupt. The trustee sought and the referee ordered rejection of the contract with buyer. This order was affirmed on appeal. The court ruled that the interest of buyer was subject to rejection by the trustee and that the remedy of buyer “is a claim for damages for breach of the agreement.”
Id.
at 54. Thus buyer, who under state law may have owned the land, was relegated to the status of an unsecured creditor.
New York Investors
was followed.
E.g., Gulf Petroleum, S. A. v. Collazo,
316 F.2d 257 (1st Cir. 1963);
Matter of Philadelphia Penn Worsted Company,
278 F.2d 661 (3d Cir. 1960). But there was uneasiness over its result, and some courts moved to soften its impact.
E.g., In re Mercury Homes Devel
opment Co.,
4 B.C.D. 837 (N.D.Cal.1978) (trustee may reject contract but cannot deprive vendee of interest in land).
Meanwhile, reformers sought change. The Commission spearheaded this movement and Sections 365(i) and 365(j) evolved from its report,
see
Report of the Commission on the Bankruptcy Laws of the United States,
supra
at Sections 4-602(d) and 4-602(f)(1), which in turn, was derived from a working paper,
see id.
at Part I, at 199 n. 114, at 206 n. 160, Part II, at 158 n. 17, at 172 — 173 n. 21, later published as Lacy, “Land Sale Contracts in Bankruptcy,” 21 U.C.L.A.L.Rev. 477 (1973).
The method for apportioning the benefits and burdens of insolvency, Lacy wrote, cannot be found through “definitions of ‘execu-tory’ .... Instead, the search should be for a policy which defines those interests of present or potential value which may properly be taken from others for the benefit of the bankrupt or his estate.”
Id.
at 482. Nondebtor vendees deserve special treatment, not because their contract is executo-ry in the sense that performance remains due on both sides, but because “the purchaser in this kind of contract is likely to be the buyer of a home or farm or small business who has adjusted to a new location. Very often, especially in the case of a residential buyer, he will be poor. Certainly, modern American bankruptcy policy places as high a value on relieving the poor from the consequences of their own and others’ improvidence as in doing perfect justice between creditors.”
Id.
at 484.
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RALPH R. MABEY, Bankruptcy Judge.
INTRODUCTION AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
This case asks whether debtor, who is vendee under a contract for deed, has rights in an “executory contract” within the meaning of 11 U.S.C. Section 365.
Debtor is a debtor in possession under Chapter ll.
He is a broker and dealer in real property. His schedules show land worth $2,641,550, most of which has been bought or sold on contracts for deed.
Lewis and Edris Calvert (sellers) made a contract to sell land to debtor at a price of $97,200, with $1,100 down, and the balance payable over time with interest. Sellers must convey title .when debtor completes performance. They may forfeit his interest if he defaults. Debtor has resold the property, again using a contract, to a third party, John Collett.
Sellers moved for an order, pursuant to Section 365(d)(2), directing debtor to assume or reject their contract. Debtor demurred, arguing that the contract is not executory and therefore Section 365 is inapplicable. After denying the motion orally on the record, the court files this explanatory memorandum.
EXECUTORY CONTRACTS AND BANKRUPTCY POLICY
Sellers point to the definition of executo-ry contract formulated by Professor Countryman: “a contract under which the obligations of both the bankrupt and the other party to the contract are so far unperformed that the failure of either to complete performance would constitute a material breach excusing the performance of the other.” Countryman, “Executory Contracts in Bankruptcy: Part I,” 57 Minn.L.Rev. 439, 460 (1973).
This definition embraces the contract for deed, they maintain, because both sides have unperformed obligations,
viz.
payment by debtor and delivery of title by sellers. Failure of either to complete performance would constitute a material breach excusing the performance of the other.
Countryman propounded a definition of executory contract which was “functional,” that is, “defined in the light of the purpose for which the trustee is given the option to assume or reject. Similar to his general power to abandon or accept other property, this is an option to be exercised when it will benefit the estate.” Countryman,
supra
at 450. From this premise, he framed his test of performance due on both sides. If the creditor has performed, rejection would be meaningless, since “the estate has whatever benefit it can obtain .... and ... rejection would neither add to nor detract from the creditor’s claim or the estate’s liability.”
Id.
at 451. Assumption likewise would be meaningless, and further, would transform the obligation of debtor into a cost of administration, “a prerogative which the Bankruptcy Act has never been supposed to have vested in either the trustee or the court.”
Id.
at 452. If the debtor has performed, assumption adds nothing to his right to performance. Rejection, on the other hand, would not constitute a breach. In short, the Countryman test is an index to when assumption or rejection of a contract will “benefit the estate” and therefore of when a contract is executory.
Section 365, however, reflects a number of policies, including not only benefit to the estate but also protection of creditors. The Countryman test may often define the benefit to the estate, but does it always? And does it speak to the protection of creditors?
See
Julis, “Classifying Rights and Interests Under the Bankruptcy Code,” 55 Am.Bank. L.J. 223 (1981). These questions underlie the refusal of the Commission to define executory contract, Report of the Commission on the Bankruptcy Laws of the United States, H.Doc.No.93-137, Part I, at 199 (1973) (“any succinct statutory language risks an unintended omission or inclusion”), especially in relation to the contract for deed.
Sections 365(i) and 365(j), for example, give special treatment to nondebtor vendees of land sale contracts. They were passed in response to the plight of nondebtor vendees under former law. In
In re New York Investors Mutual Group,
143 F.Supp. 51 (S.D.N.Y.1956), the debtor had contracted to sell land to. a buyer for $105,000. There was a down payment of $15,000 with the balance due at closing in 18 months. Prior to closing, debtor was adjudicated bankrupt. The trustee sought and the referee ordered rejection of the contract with buyer. This order was affirmed on appeal. The court ruled that the interest of buyer was subject to rejection by the trustee and that the remedy of buyer “is a claim for damages for breach of the agreement.”
Id.
at 54. Thus buyer, who under state law may have owned the land, was relegated to the status of an unsecured creditor.
New York Investors
was followed.
E.g., Gulf Petroleum, S. A. v. Collazo,
316 F.2d 257 (1st Cir. 1963);
Matter of Philadelphia Penn Worsted Company,
278 F.2d 661 (3d Cir. 1960). But there was uneasiness over its result, and some courts moved to soften its impact.
E.g., In re Mercury Homes Devel
opment Co.,
4 B.C.D. 837 (N.D.Cal.1978) (trustee may reject contract but cannot deprive vendee of interest in land).
Meanwhile, reformers sought change. The Commission spearheaded this movement and Sections 365(i) and 365(j) evolved from its report,
see
Report of the Commission on the Bankruptcy Laws of the United States,
supra
at Sections 4-602(d) and 4-602(f)(1), which in turn, was derived from a working paper,
see id.
at Part I, at 199 n. 114, at 206 n. 160, Part II, at 158 n. 17, at 172 — 173 n. 21, later published as Lacy, “Land Sale Contracts in Bankruptcy,” 21 U.C.L.A.L.Rev. 477 (1973).
The method for apportioning the benefits and burdens of insolvency, Lacy wrote, cannot be found through “definitions of ‘execu-tory’ .... Instead, the search should be for a policy which defines those interests of present or potential value which may properly be taken from others for the benefit of the bankrupt or his estate.”
Id.
at 482. Nondebtor vendees deserve special treatment, not because their contract is executo-ry in the sense that performance remains due on both sides, but because “the purchaser in this kind of contract is likely to be the buyer of a home or farm or small business who has adjusted to a new location. Very often, especially in the case of a residential buyer, he will be poor. Certainly, modern American bankruptcy policy places as high a value on relieving the poor from the consequences of their own and others’ improvidence as in doing perfect justice between creditors.”
Id.
at 484.
He criticized the assumption that “the purchaser whose contract is rejected after he has paid a part of the price will have only an unsecured claim” but that “he may get the land if he has paid the entire price on the ground that the contract is no longer ‘executory.’ .... The suggested distinction between paid-in-part and paid-in-full seems utterly capricious. Instead, one should not speculate about the meaning of ‘executory’ but rather should consider what ought to be thrown into the pot for general creditors and when it is fair to recognize special claims to certain assets.” Lacy,
supra
at 487.
Others echoed Lacy. One, emphasizing the “economic consequences” of rejection, argued that the nondebtor vendee should not be “used as a resource by the trustee to increase the bankrupt’s estate and the cost of the bankruptcy [should] be completely borne by commercial creditors. This would increase the creditors’ incentive to deal only with sound vendors and would entirely remove this ‘policing’ function from the vendees, who occupy the poorest position to exercise such control. Moreover, the commercial creditors are capable of distributing the risks of a vendor’s bankruptcy, but the vendees are not. The creditors can simply pass on the increased costs of vendor bankruptcy by raising the cost of credit. Most likely, the vendees would ultimately pay for most of this increase in the cost of credit. But they would be paying as a group, and therefore the risks of bankruptcy would be distributed evenly and rationally — rather than falling completely on a small and arbitrary group of vendees.” Note, “Bankruptcy and the Land Sale Contract,” 23 Case Wes.Res.L.Rev. 393, 41CMU1 (1972).
Thus, Sections 365(i) and 365(j), far from representing the Countryman test, are a tonic for the consequence of its application. This suggests that, in the final analysis, executory contracts are measured not by a mutuality of commitments but by the nature of the parties and the goals of reorganization. A debtor as vendee is free from the constraints of Section 365, and is thereby afforded flexibility in proposing a plan, but meanwhile must provide, upon request,
adequate protection to vendors. A debtor as vendor may use Section 365 as a springboard to rehabilitation but not at the expense of vendees. Cf.
In
re
Summit Land Co.,
13 B.R. 310 (Bkrtcy.D.Utah 1980). Thus, it is the consequences of applying Section 365 to a party, especially in terms of benefit to the estate and the protection of creditors, not the form of contract between vendor and vendee, which controls. This conclusion is supported by many statutory provisions and much judicial gloss.
EXECUTORY CONTRACTS AND THE POLICIES OF BENEFIT TO THE ESTATE AND THE PROTECTION OF CREDITORS
The contract for deed, where debt- or is vendee, benefits the estate more when viewed as a lien
than as an executory contract. This is because treatment of the contract for deed as a lien enlarges the value of the estate and furthers the rehabilitation of the debtor. This treatment likewise makes adequate protection available to creditors.
1.
Enlarging The Value of The Estate.
The assumption or rejection of execu-tory contracts, like the strong-arm and other avoiding powers, “is a valuable weapon ... in the armory of the trustee,” meant to free “his estate to pay a larger dividend to general creditors.” Silverstein, “Rejection of Executory Contracts In Bankruptcy and Reorganization,” 31 U.Chi.L.Rev. 467, 468 (1964). If the contract for deed is viewed as an executory contract, it may be assumed or rejected, but if assumed, it must be taken
cum onere,
that is, debtor must take the contract as written, with its benefits and burdens.
In practical terms this means that, absent assumption of the contract, vendor may enforce his remedy of forfeiture. Vendor, although in substance a mortgagee,
may receive an advantage over other lienors, and the estate may be deprived of whatever equity exists in the property. The bankruptcy court, as a court of equity, regards substance over form, demands equality of treatment among creditors, and loathes a forfeiture. The contract should be treated as a lien; the vendor is thereby placed on a par with other lienors; forfeiture and the loss of equity are prevented.
This result is analogous to the treatment of security interests disguised as leases. The lessor is entitled to assumption and performance of the lease or rejection and return of the property, with any equity lost to the estate. The security interest disguised as a lease, however, is treated as a lien, with any equity available to the estate.
Cf.
Countryman,
supra
at 484-491;
In re Scrap Disposal, Inc.,
15 B.R. 296, 8 B.C.D. 504, 506 (Bkrtcy.App.Pan., 9th Cir., 1981);
In re Rojas,
10 B.R. 353 (Bkrtcy.App. Panel, 9th Cir., 1981).
2.
Furthering the Rehabilitation of the Debtor.
Executory contracts should be handled to “assist in the debtor’s rehabilitation.” H.R.Rep.No.95-595, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 348 (1977), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin. News, p. 6304. If the contract is executory, and if it is assumed during the interim between petition and plan, defaults must be cured, damages must be paid, and adequate assurance of performance must be given, all as costs of administration. If the contract is assumed in a plan, the same conditions must be satisfied with the accumulated costs of administration payable on the effective date, of the plan.
The same burdens are imposed if the contract is assigned, in or without a plan.
Indeed, one court has held that the stay does not prevent suits for payments which accrue postpetition as administrative claims.
See In re Kors, Inc.,
13 B.R. 683 (Bkrtcy.D.Vt.1981).
If the contract is a lien, assumption is irrelevant, and no administrative costs are incurred.
Instead of taking the contract
cum onere,
the lien may be “dealt with” in a plan,
viz.,
by scaling down the debt, reducing the interest rate, and extending ma
turities.
With or without a plan, the property may be sold free of the lien.
Debtor, like most dealers in the contract for deed, uses that instrument because other financing is unavailable. He can afford little down, and hopes to subdivide and resell in order to meet payments. Chapter 11 has not improved his cash flow. Cf. Countryman,
supra
at 48U-491;
In re Yale Express System, Inc.,
384 F.2d 990, 992 (2d Cir. 1967). Treating the contract as a lien thus allows more latitude in proposing a plan and thereby furthers the rehabilitation of the debtor.
3.
Adequate Protection of Creditors.
Vendors have two rights under a contract for deed: the right to payment, which is not adequately protected,
and the right to hold title as security, which is adequately protected. While the right to payment is suspended, the interest in property is adequately protected. This strikes a balance between vendors, other creditors, and the estate. Vendors are not preferred, for example, in terms of administrative claims, but are treated on a par with other mortgagees,
cf.
Silverstein,
supra
at 494-496, who are protected against any decrease in the value of their liens.
Cf. In re Alyucan Interstate Corp.,
12 B.R. 803, 4 C.B.C.2d 1066 (Bkrtcy.D.Utah 1981).
THE BASIS FOR DISTINGUISHING BETWEEN DEBTORS AS VENDORS AND AS VENDEES
Sellers contend that Sections 365(i) and 365(j) mean that contracts for deed are executory contracts. They argue that because Sections 365(i) and 365(j) treat some contracts for deed as executory contracts,
all contracts for deed must be executory contracts. Put differently, it would be anomalous if contracts where the debtor
sells
realty are executory but contracts where the debtor
buys
realty are not. This would result in the contract between debtor and Collett being executory and the contract between debtor and sellers being non-executory although both are identical in form. Consistency in the treatment of contracts for deed, whether debtor is vendor or vendee, is necessary for a sensible construction of the Code.
Seller’s argument founders, however, on at least two shoals. First, treatment of the contract for deed as an executory contract, where debtor is vendee, ignores the reasons for enacting Sections 365(i) and 365(j). They were passed to give nondebtor vendees the protection of mortgagors. Viewing the contract for deed as a lien, where debtor is vendee, therefore is consistent with the spirit of these provisions. Second, consistency in terminology, that is treating contracts for deed as executory contracts under Section 365 in every instance, favors nondebtor vendees over debt- or vendees and debtor vendors over debtor vendees in bankruptcy. Particularized treatment of the contract for deed is necessary to avoid these consequences.
First.
Sections 365(i) and 365(j), as discussed above, were enacted to prevent harm which had occurred under prior law to non-debtor vendees. They accomplish this purpose, where the vendee is in possession, by allowing him to stay, continue payments, and receive title. In short, he is treated as a mortgagor, an analogy frequently drawn by proponents of Sections 365(i) and 365(j).
See, e.g.,
Nambar, Contracts in Bankruptcy 152 (1977); Lacy,
supra
at 480 and 485; Note,
supra
at 397 and 410.
Countryman notes that mortgages are not executory contracts and “where the vendor of land is himself the purchase money mortgagee, including those cases where applicable nonbankruptcy law will treat the land sale contract as a mortgage, the situation seems no different.” Countryman,
supra
at 472. Then what of a debtor as vendor in California where contracts for 'deed are deemed mortgages? Under the Countryman test this would not be an exec-utory contract. But this interpretation would deprive homeowners of the protection of Section 365(i). We afford them protection either by sacrificing the symmetry of sellers’ argument or by recognizing that vendees are seen as mortgagors under Section 365(i). What about the debtor as vendee? We can take Countryman at face value and call the contract a lien, bypassing Section 365, but it will still be the same piece of paper, which under different circumstances, mandates special treatment to nondebtor vendees under Section 365(i).
Second.
Consistency in the characterization of the contract leads to disparity in the treatment of the parties for other reasons. Where debtor is vendor, vendees are protected at least with a lien for the amount paid on the contract under Section 365(j). But where debtor is vendee, he has no protection under Section 365(j). Absent cure and adequate assurance of performance, he stands to lose, through forfeiture, his equity in the property. Likewise, debtor as vendor, under some circumstances, may sell the property free of liens. Thus, unencumbered proceeds, or encumbered proceeds for which adequate protection is provided, may underwrite operations pending workout of a plan, or fund a plan. But debtor as vendee may have no similar option.
He must find cash to cure and supply adequate assurance of performance before he may assume the contract. And assumption is a condition to assignment of the contract.
The upshot is that nondebtor vendees, by virtue of Sections 365(i) and 365(j), may receive more favorable treatment in bankruptcy than debtor vendees. And debtor vendors, because of other policies and provisions in the Code, may fare better than debtor vendees. It may be argued that this disparity in treatment is warranted because of the risk of default when debtor is vendor,
or because the nondebtor, in each instance, is an innocent victim. But this argument admits that the reasons for calling a contract “executory” may have less to do with the terms of the “paper” than with
the status of the parties and their interests in light of bankruptcy policies.
CONCLUSION
The court is reluctant to depart from a rule as workable as the Countryman test. But application of the rule in this case contradicts the reason for its existence. Classifying the contract for deed, where debtor is vendee, as a lien rather than an executory contract benefits the estate by enlarging the value of the estate and furthering the rehabilitation of the debtor. Sellers, as lienors, enjoy adequate protection. This is in harmony with the rationale for Section 365(i) and 365(j). The blessings and burdens of reorganization are fairly distributed between creditors and the estate.