In Re Bremer

104 B.R. 999, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1404, 1989 WL 99202
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedAugust 22, 1989
Docket19-50117
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 104 B.R. 999 (In Re Bremer) 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 Bremer, 104 B.R. 999, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1404, 1989 WL 99202 (Mo. 1989).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

FRANK W. KOGER, Chief Judge.

Debtors filed for relief under Chapter 12 on January 16, 1987. A confirmation hearing was held June 29, 1987. On September 12, 1987 the Bankruptcy Court, the Honorable Dennis J. Stewart presiding, amended the debtors’ proposed Chapter 12 plan to include distribution to unsecured and un-dersecured creditors in the amount of $39,-482.00, which the Court found to be non-exempt, unsecured assets improperly excluded from the debtors’ plan. The Court held that it could not confirm the plan under the “best interest of creditors” test of 11 U.S.C. Section 1225(a)(4) unless the above described amendment was included in the plan. After denial of their Motion For Reconsideration, the debtors appealed the Bankruptcy Court’s valuation of assets under the test. The District Court reversed and remanded for reconsideration and re-computation of the “best interest of creditors” test. The matter is now before this Court. Three issues must be resolved: (1) whether the hypothetical Chapter 7 liquidation of Section 1225(a)(4) should be set at the time the debtor filed the petition in bankruptcy, or at the time of the effective date of the plan; (2) whether certain assets of the debtor, namely future federal aid payments (CRP), and crops in existence though not harvested at the effective date, are to be considered property of the estate for purposes of including them in the “best interest of creditors” analysis; and (3) how the assets should be valued.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

Joseph J. Bremer and Claudette M. Bremer (hereinafter “the debtors”) filed a petition for relief under Chapter 12 on January 16, 1987. Their 480 acre farm is located in Gentry County, Missouri. At the time of the filing, the 392 tillable acres of their farm were primarily devoted to growing soybeans.

On February 19, 1987, the Farmers Home Administration (hereinafter FmHA) filed a proof of claim in the amount of $382,344.41. The claim is secured by a security interest in the debtors’ real estate and certain farm machinery. At a hearing on confirmation on June 29, 1987, the debtors and FmHA negotiated for a plan treatment because of a dispute over the value of the real estate used as collateral. At the hearing, the parties agreed that the claim would be allowed as secured in the sum of $190,000.00, to be amortized over twenty *1001 (20) years, with interest at 7%. It was agreed that the annual payment of $17,-622.00 would be made in December of each year.

Lawson Equipment, Inc. also filed a claim in the amount of $82,365.75. The claim was secured by some of the debtors’ farm machinery, trucks and trailers. Debtors valued the collateral at $32,950.00. After negotiation debtors agreed to surrender the farm equipment, and a truck, and to retain other trucks and trailers values at $22,500.00. Under the debtors’ reorganization plan, Lawson’s secured claim of $22,-500.00 was to be amortized over five (5) years with interest at 10%. The payments were to be made quarterly in the amount of $1,434.00.

At the June 29, 1987 confirmation hearing, Mr. Bremer testified as to his income for 1987. Soybeans, which were not available for harvest until November or December, were planted on fifty-two (52) acres. Three hundred twenty-five (325) acres were placed in the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), with payment to begin in October or November, 1987. 1 Testimony regarding these assets were projections of income. At the hearing Mr. Bremer testified that he would receive $18,850.00 from CRP payments and a $7,507.50 yield from his crops.

Under the proposed plan, the balance of FmHA’s and Lawson’s claims were treated as unsecured. Neither creditor objected to the treatment of the unsecured class nor, after the agreement with FmHA, to valuation.

On August 28, 1987, the Court issued an order directing creditors to show cause why the proposed plan, as orally amended at the June 29 hearing, should not be confirmed. In that order the Court noted that the schedules filed by the debtors at the time of filing showed the following non-exempt, unsecured property: 2

Description Value
cash and money in the bank $ 1,850.00
growing crops $37,632.00

The creditors did not respond to the show cause order.

Nevertheless, the Court entered an order on September 23, 1987, amending the debtors’ proposed Chapter 12 plan of adjustment to provide for the payment of $39,-482.00 to unsecured and undersecured creditors. The Court based its amendment on the “clear, unequivocal and uncontradict-ed” statement of the debtors in their statement of operations to the effect that they had $39,482.00 in unsecured property as of the date of the confirmation hearing, June 29, 1987.

In part, the Court based its decision on 11 U.S.C. Section 1225(a)(5):

In imposing the requirement, however, that a chapter 12 debtor propose to pay unsecured creditors at least as much as they would have received in straight liquidation under chapter 7, section 1225(a)(4) clearly provides that the value of the property which would have been liquidated is to be measured as of the “effective date of the plan” not as of the date of filing of the petition.

Although none of the creditors objected to the plan in this regard, the Court noted that the requirements of Section 1225 do not provide for waiver with respect to the requirement that the creditors receive at least as much as they would receive in straight liquidation. The plan was confirmed as amended.

The debtors subsequently filed a timely Motion To Alter Or Amend The Judgment, alleging that on the date of filing (January 16, 1987) they did not have any crops planted. The only unencumbered assets the debtors claim to have had at this time *1002 consisted of money in the bank. In an affidavit in support of this Motion, Joseph Bremer declared that on the date of filing, all of the 1986 crop, or the proceeds from that crop, had been sold and disbursed. Mr. Bremer also stated in this affidavit that the 1987 crop had not been planted as of the filing date.

The Bankruptcy Court denied the Motion For Reconsideration by an order signed October 29, 1987. The Court found Mr. Bremer’s assertion that the crops were not in existence at the time of filing to be at odds with the earlier assertion made in connection with the filing of the petition that the crops were in existence at that time:

... [TJheir current statement, viewed in context of the schedules of their assets filed with the petition is not credible, when those schedules do not reveal the existence of the cash assets which would seemingly have been necessary for crop inputs.

The Court confirmed the amended plan, ordering the debtors to distribute an additional $39,482.00 to the unsecured creditors pro rata over a five (5) year period.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 B.R. 999, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1404, 1989 WL 99202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bremer-mowb-1989.