In re Buena Park Development Corp.

20 B.R. 215
CourtDistrict Court, C.D. California
DecidedApril 29, 1982
DocketBankruptcy No. 78-7415; No. CV 81-5349-DWW
StatusPublished

This text of 20 B.R. 215 (In re Buena Park Development Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Buena Park Development Corp., 20 B.R. 215 (C.D. Cal. 1982).

Opinion

ORDER REVERSING BANKRUPTCY COURT AND REINSTATING FEES UNDER BOTH § 40(c)(2)(A) and § 40(c)(2)(B) OF THE BANKRUPTCY ACT

DAVID W. WILLIAMS, Senior District Judge.

This appeal arises out of a petition of Bankruptcy filed by Buena Park Development Corporation on August 15, 1978. In the initial Chapter (“Ch.”) 11 proceeding about $400,000 in cash was accumulated. The action was then converted to a Ch. 7 proceeding, the $400,000 was deposited with the Ch. 7 trustee, and an additional $200,000 was realized during the Ch. 7 proceeding from the sale of Ch. 11 receivables and certain other assets that had pre-existed the original petition, among them the debtor’s “Holiday Inn of Buena Park.” Also, the Ch. 7 trustee realized a net amount from his two-week operation of the debtor’s hotel. In addition, all other property owned or held by the debtor passed to the Ch. 7 trustee upon the conversion.

The conversion came about because the debtor had not complied with the Bankruptcy Court’s order directing debtor to file a plan of arrangement by May 31, 1980. The conversion entitled the trustee to sell the debtor’s assets, with Court approval. When they applied for an order adjudicating the debtor a bankrupt for failure to file a plan of arrangement, the creditors had also sought an order appointing a trustee and authorizing him to sell the debtor’s hotel to the Builders Investment Group (“BIG”). (Application of June 10, 1980) (“Application”). The court below did authorize the sale, which was later consummated. BIG was itself a creditor and the terms of the sale adjusted BIG’s rights as a creditor in relation to the rights of other creditors. (Application at 4). Apparently the main asset sold to BIG, the Holiday Inn of Buena Park, had been debtor’s chief operating asset.

On July 22, 1980, the debtor filed its “Ch. 11 Petition in Pending Bankruptcy Case”, thus reconverting the Ch. 7 proceeding to a [217]*217Ch. 11 proceeding. On March 19, 1981, the Bankruptcy Court entered its Order confirming the debtor’s “Third Amended Plan of Arrangement as Modified,” pursuant to which all unsecured creditors (including BIG) were paid in full.

Later, on June 8, 1981, the Bankruptcy Court entered its Order setting the fees of the trustee and various counsel, and fixing the amount of the estate’s obligation to the Referee’s Salary and Expense Fund (“the Fund”). The assessment against the estate for the fund was fixed at $21,689.52, consisting of: $14,804.03 computed pursuant to § 40(c)(2)(a) of the Act (“a”), $6,594.24 computed in accordance with § 40(c)(2)(b) of the Act (“b”), and special charges of $291.25.

The debtor requested reconsideration of the Court’s Order fixing the estate’s obligation to the Fund, on the ground that the Order imposed an improper double charge against the estate. The United States then intervened and filed its brief in support of the Bankruptcy Court’s Order of June 3, 1981. On September 23, 1981, following a hearing on the debtor’s request for reconsideration, Judge Elliot entered his “Order Granting Reconsideration and Order Reducing Salary and Expense Fund,” pursuant to which he reduced the estate’s obligation to the Fund by $14,804.03, the (a) charge.

The United States appeals from the Bankruptcy Court’s Order of September 23, 1981, and urges reinstatement of that Court’s original Order of June 3, 1981.

The issue is whether, in a Ch. 11 case converted into a Ch. 7 proceeding and later reconverted into a Ch. 11 case in which a plan of arrangement is confirmed, the basis for computing the estate’s obligation to the Fund is solely § 40(e)(2)(b), or is it §§ 40(e)(2)(a) and (b).

Appellant contends that imposition of fees under both sections was proper because the estate benefited from both Ch. 7 and Ch. 11 proceedings. Section 40(c)(2) provides:

Additional fees for the referees’ salary and expense fund shall be charged, in accordance with the schedule fixed by the conference (a) against every estate wholly or partially liquidated in a bankruptcy proceeding, and be computed upon the net proceeds realized;
(b) against each case in an arrangement confirmed under Chapter 11 of this title, and be computed upon the amount to be paid to the unsecured creditors upon confirmation of the arrangement and thereafter, pursuant to the terms of the arrangement, and where under the arrangement any part of the consideration to be distributed is other than money, upon the fair market value of such consideration; and (c). . . .”

Because there is no language that states, or can be interpreted, to the effect that the fees are mutually exclusive, appellant argues that fees should be assessed under both sections. More specifically, it notes that a partial liquidation took place by virtue of the Ch. 7 trustee’s receipt of $400,000 in funds accumulated during the original Ch. 11 proceeding, and his realization of $200,000 from the sale of Ch. 7 receivables and of a net amount from his two-week operation of appellee’s hotel. These amounts were subject to the § 40(c)(2)(a) levy because they were “net proceeds realized” within the terms of that provision.1 Mesa Farm Company v. United States, 475 F.2d 1004 (9th Cir. 1973) held that the Congressional intent required that the fee paid into the fund be assessed in accordance with the size of the § 40(c)(2)(a) estate, 475 F.2d at 1007-08; therefore, the Fund will be shortchanged if only the less substantial § 40(c)(2)(b) levy is assessed where, as here, the estate benefits from a Ch. 7 proceeding before the case is concluded in a Ch. 11 arrangement. Thus, appellant argues, the fees originally imposed should be reinstated.

[218]*218Appellee argues that the existence of net proceeds is irrelevent, because the issue is not the formula to be used in computing a charge under § 40(c)(2)(a), but rather whether any charge whatsoever is due under that section. Further, it states, Mesa Farm Co., supra, merely established that in a liquidation case the computation for determining an estate’s obligation to the Fund is based upon “net proceeds realized”, as defined by the Judicial Conference of the United States.

Appellee also argues that the Bankruptcy Act consistently avoids the imposition of duplicative charges. It contends that in a proceeding such as this, the determination of the estate’s proper contribution to the Fund is analogous to the determination of the appropriate amount of the trustee’s fee. The measure of the trustee’s fee in such situation is specifically addressed by Bankruptcy Act § 48(f), former 11 U.S.C. 76(f), which provides that the trustee shall receive the statutory percentage computed upon “all moneys disbursed ... by him to any persons including lienholders, upon all moneys to be paid to unsecured creditors upon the confirmation of the arrangement, . . . [etc.].”

The appellee contends that the trustee in a superseded bankruptcy case is not allowed to collect those fees and then charge the estate a further fee pursuant to section 48(c), computed upon all moneys disbursed in the superseded bankruptcy. It therefore concludes that in a Ch. 11 case involving a confirmed plan which supersedes a bankruptcy case, only § 40(c)(2)(b) provides a basis for assessing fees for the Fund.

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Bluebook (online)
20 B.R. 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-buena-park-development-corp-cacd-1982.