In Re Carper
This text of 63 B.R. 582 (In Re Carper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In re Donald L. CARPER, Sr. and Shirley P. Carper, Debtors.
John G. LEAKE, Trustee, Plaintiff,
v.
UNITED STATES of America, acting Through FARMERS HOME ADMINISTRATION UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, Defendant.
United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Virginia, Harrisonburg Division.
*583 Douglas T. Stark, Harrisonburg, Va., for plaintiff.
Jennie L. Montgomery, Asst. U.S. Atty., and Demetrie L. Augustinos, U.S. Dist. Atty., Roanoke, Va., for defendant.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
THOMAS J. WILSON, III, Chief Judge.
This matter arises upon the Trustee's Complaint to avoid certain transfers of property of Donald L. Carper, Sr., a Debtor herein (the "Debtor"), to the United States of America, through the Farmers Home Administration ("FmHA"). The "transfers" involved herein are the attachment of security interests in favor of FmHA in milk sale proceeds generated by the Debtor's dairy-farming operation within the 90-day preference period of 11 U.S.C. § 547(b)(4)(A). The Trustee maintains that the transfers are avoidable pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 547(b) and that they are not made unavoidable by 11 U.S.C. § 547(c)(5) because and to the extent that the transfers enabled FmHA to improve its position within the preference period to the prejudice of undersecured creditors. The Court is called upon to determine, inter alia, the extent to which FmHA's improvement in position was "to the prejudice of other creditors holding unsecured claims" within the meaning of 11 U.S.C. § 547(c)(5).
Findings of Fact
The facts herein have for the most part been agreed upon by stipulation. In conjunction with the Debtor's dairy farming operation, the Debtor has been at all times relevant hereto indebted to FmHA in an amount in excess of $100,000.00. To secure its claim, FmHA held, at all relevant times, perfected security interests in, inter alia, the Debtor's crops, plant products, farm equipment, inventory, livestock, farm products and supplies, and all products and/or proceeds thereof. FmHA's security interest accordingly attached to the milk produced by the Debtor's dairy operations.
On July 20, 1984, the Debtor and FmHA executed an "Assignment of Proceeds from the Sale of Dairy Products and Release of Security Interest" ("Assignment and Release") whereby the Debtor assigned to FmHA the sale proceeds from his sale of milk to Valley of Virginia Milk Producers Association (the "Milk Producers Association"), with a monthly upper limit of $1,679.00, and whereby FmHA released its lien on milk sold to the Milk Producers Association. The three payments from the Milk Producers Association to FmHA which are the focus of the instant adversary proceeding were made pursuant to the above Assignment and Release and were the last three of such monthly payments made to FmHA prior to the filing of the Debtor's voluntary Chapter 7 petition. The three payments, each in the amount of $1,679.00, were made successively on March 12, 1985, April 12, 1985, and May 13, 1985. The Debtor's bankruptcy petition was filed on May 21, 1985, and thus the three payments were all made within the ninety-day period immediately preceding the filing. It further appears that throughout this ninety-day period FmHA was undersecured and that both the amount of FmHA's claim against the Debtor and the value of its collateral remained constant, except to the extent that FmHA's security interest attached in, and FmHA received payment for, the milk sold within this period. The Trustee seeks pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 547(b) to avoid the attachment of FmHA's security interest in the milk sold, and the sales proceeds generated, within the ninety-day period and, in effect, seeks to recover from FmHA the three payments pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 550(a).
Conclusions of Law
Subsection (b) of Bankruptcy Code § 547, 11 U.S.C. § 547(b), is the so-called "Avoidable Preference" provision of the Code which provides the trustee with the power to avoid those transfers of property interests of the debtor which satisfy each of the five enumerated elements of what is commonly referred to as a "preference". While Subsection (b) is the general rule, Subsection (c), 11 U.S.C. § 547(c), provides *584 specific exceptions to the rule, enumerating those transfers which a trustee may not avoid notwithstanding that they otherwise meet the definitional requirements of a preference. In the instant case, FmHA maintains in the first instance that the transfers involved herein are not preferences because they did not enable it to receive more than it would have received under a hypothetical Chapter 7 distribution and that therefore the fifth requisite element of a preference is lacking. See 11 U.S.C. § 547(b)(5). FmHA further argues that even if the § 547(b)(5) element of a preference should be deemed to have been met in the instant case, the transfers are nevertheless excepted from the Trustee's general avoidance power by 11 U.S.C. § 547(c)(5).
The Court finds FmHA's latter argument compelling. Assuming the transfers at issue in this case are preferences which would ordinarily be avoidable under the general rule of § 547(b), the Court concludes that the § 547(c)(5) exception to the Trustee's avoidance power applies in this case and precludes the avoidance of the milk payments to FmHA because of the absence of any prejudice to the holders of unsecured claims.
Section 547(c)(5) limits the extent to which the trustee may avoid as preferences those transfers which create perfected security interests in the Debtor's inventory or receivables. The Section is intended to deal with those creditors with floating security interests in after-acquired inventory and receivables, pursuant to Article Nine of the Uniform Commercial Code. The parties are in agreement that FmHA's floating liens in the milk and milk proceeds are of the type of security interests dealt with by § 547(c)(5).
Section 547(c)(5) provides that the trustee may avoid as preferences the creation of such Article Nine security interests in favor of an undersecured creditor, but only to the extent that they caused, within the applicable preference period, "a reduction ... of any amount by which the debt secured by such security interest exceeded the value of all security interests for such debt...." The language of the statute is far from lucid. But in more simple terms, § 547(c)(5) applies what is commonly referred to as the "improvement in position test," under which the trustee may avoid the perfection of security interests to the extent that they enabled the creditor to "improve its position" within the preference period.
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63 B.R. 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-carper-vawb-1986.