In Re Charge Trucking, Inc.

236 B.R. 620, 42 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1575, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1110
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Texas
DecidedJuly 19, 1999
Docket19-40286
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 236 B.R. 620 (In Re Charge Trucking, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Charge Trucking, Inc., 236 B.R. 620, 42 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1575, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1110 (Tex. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

DONALD R. SHARP, Chief Judge.

NOW before the Court are pleadings styled “Motion Of First National Bank of Van Alstyne For Relief From Automatic Stay and Second Motion Of First National Bank of Van Alstyne For Relief From Automatic Stay” (the “Motions”). This opinion constitutes the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law required by Fed.R.Bankr.Proc. 7052 and disposes of all issues before the Court.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Charge Trucking, Inc., (the “Debtor”), initiated the within bankruptcy proceeding by filing a petition for relief under Chapter 7 of Title 11 of the U.S. Code. Thereafter, a Chapter 7 Trustee was appointed. The Debtor operated a commercial trucking business. Previously, over a period of several years, the Debtor had executed five promissory notes and security agreements to the benefit of First National Bank of Van Alstyne (“the Bank”) secured by various trucks. 1 In addition, the Debtor executed a promissory note and security agreement to the benefit of the Bank, in the amount of $25,000 to be secured by certain unspecified “accounts, instruments, documents, chattel paper and other rights to payment” (the “$25,000.00 Note”). The $25,000 Note refers to a $15.00 UCC filing fee, however, the Bank admits that it never filed a UCC-1 with respect to the $25,-000.00 Note.

The Debtor also entered into a relationship with the Bank under two Business Account Agreements opening a checking account/operating account and an interest bearing savings account referred to by the parties as the “reserve account” pursuant to a Business/Manager Agreement dated January 8, 1997. The Business/Manager Agreement purported to sell the Bank the Debtor’s accounts receivable up to the amount of $100,000.00 and allowed the Bank to retain a portion of the sums payable to the Debtor as a reserve. The term of the agreement had not expired as of the date of the filing of the Debtor’s petition. The evidence indicates that as of the date of filing $8,606.34 was on deposit with the Bank in the operating account and $11,504.10 was on deposit with the Bank in the reserve account. The Business Account Agreements contain a provision pursuant to which the Debtor agreed that the Bank might setoff the funds in the Debtor’s account against any due and payable debt owed to the Bank. The commencement of a bankruptcy proceeding constituted an event of default under the terms of the Business/Manager Agree *622 ment the effect of which rendered the Debtor’s obligations to the Bank immediately due and payable without notice. (Section 8 of the Business/Manager Agreement; Plaintiffs Exhibit 15). The Bank placed an administrative freeze on both accounts when the petition was filed. The two Motions combined sought the following relief: (1) relief from the automatic stay to allow the Bank to reconvey accounts receivable pursuant to the business manager agreement; (2) relief from the automatic stay to allow the bank to repossess the five vehicles on which it held a lien; and (3) relief from the automatic stay to set-off the amounts in the operating and reserve accounts against debts owed to the Bank at the time of the bankruptcy.

Subsequent to the hearing and in its post-trial brief, the Bank withdrew the request for relief for the purpose of reassigning the accounts receivable to the Debtor so that issue is no longer before the Court. Also subsequent to the hearing, the Chapter 7 Trustee abandoned all interest of the estate in the five trucks and the Debtor and Creditor entered into an agreed judgment allowing relief from the stay and surrendering the trucks to the Bank. Therefore, the only issue left for decision in these combined Motions is the question of whether the Bank can set-off the amounts in the two Bank accounts against prepetition debt.

Objections to the Motions for Relief from Stay were filed by the Debtor, the Chapter 7 Trustee and Investors Mutual of Nueces, Inc. dba Accounts Receivable Funding Corporation (Nueces). Nueces asserted in its objection to the Motion that it held a prior and superior lien on the accounts receivable but it did not appear at the regularly scheduled hearing and has filed no further pleadings. To the extent Nueces maintains an objection, it is overruled for its failure to appear and prosecute.

As to the trucks, there was a great deal of testimony at the hearing concerning value and the balance due on the notes secured by the trucks. The testimony established to the Court’s satisfaction that the total balance due on the five individual truck notes plus the balance on a subsequent note in the principal amount of $25,-000.00 is $79,394.43. Events subsequent to the hearing make it unnecessary for the Court to rule on the conflicting value claims. The parties have agreed that relief from the stay should be granted and the trucks have been surrendered to the Bank. Presumably they have now been liquidated and the Bank’s deficiency claim, if any, is known to the Bank.

The more difficult and complicated problem in this case deals with the accounts receivable and the transactions between Debtor and the Bank in connection with Debtor’s accounts receivables. The Trustee spends a great deal of time in his post-trial brief arguing that the Bank does not have a valid lien on the accounts receivable nor any valid interest in the accounts receivable and that therefore, its claim to set-off should fail. The Trustee may or may not be right concerning the Bank’s claim to the accounts receivable but that is not the issue in this hearing. The Bank’s request for relief from the automatic stay is not to foreclose on the accounts receivable since the Bank takes the position that the accounts receivable were sold to it prepetition and that the Bank owns the accounts receivable and that they are not part of the bankruptcy estate. The Trustee obviously disputes this position.

Article 9 of the Texas Business and Commerce Code applies to any transaction which is intended to create a security interest in accounts and to the sale of any accounts. Tex. Bus. & Com.Code Ann. 9.102(a)(1), (2). 2 Pursuant to § 9.302(a), a *623 “filing statement must be filed to perfect all security interests except [... ]”. The exceptions which follow do not apply to the accounts receivable securing the $25,000 Note. This court is bound, when statutory language is unambiguous to interpret statutes according to the clear meaning of their language. United States v. Turkette, 452 U.S. 576, 580, 101 S.Ct. 2524, 2527, 69 L.Ed.2d 246 (1980). The Bank’s argument that Article 9 did not apply to the accounts receivable once the parties entered into the Business Management Agreement is erroneous regardless of whether the Bank characterizes the transaction as a sale, assignment or financing transaction creating a secured interest and also regardless of whether this Court applies the 1997 or the 1994 version of the law. The language of Article 9.102 plainly expresses that Article 9 applies to “any transaction” intended to create a security interest in accounts and to any sales of accounts. Subsection (b) includes assignments of the type contemplated under the Business/Management Agreement. See V.T.C.A § 9.102(b).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 B.R. 620, 42 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1575, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-charge-trucking-inc-txeb-1999.