In Re Cushman Bakery and Cushman Baking Company. Appeal of Jacob Agger, Trustee

526 F.2d 23
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 19, 1976
Docket75--1104
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 526 F.2d 23 (In Re Cushman Bakery and Cushman Baking Company. Appeal of Jacob Agger, Trustee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Cushman Bakery and Cushman Baking Company. Appeal of Jacob Agger, Trustee, 526 F.2d 23 (1st Cir. 1976).

Opinion

COFFIN, Chief Judge.

The trustee in bankruptcy for Cushman Baking Company and Cushman Bakery (hereinafter sometimes collectively referred to as “Cushman”), appeals from a final judgment of the District Court for the District of Maine, reversing the order of a bankruptcy judge. The district court held that the bankruptcy judge had erred in (1) declaring invalid a secured claim in the amount of $65,561.51 filed by Bakers Management Corporation (hereinafter referred to as “Bakers”) on the ground that the “real and personal property transfers were not properly perfected and in any event were fraudulent” and (2) further disallowing, pursuant to § 57g of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 93(g), that claim and an unsecured claim of $42,756.99 filed by Seaboard Allied Milling Corporation (hereinafter referred to as “Seaboard”), unless voidable preferences totalling $108,940.02 were surrendered. 1

I. Factual and Procedural History

Cushman Baking Company and Cushman Bakery were interrelated corporations which operated bakeries in Portland, Maine and Lynn, Massachusetts for many years. Cushman Baking Company operated the Portland plant, and Cushman Bakery operated the Lynn plant until it closed in 1967. For some 30 to 40 years, Seaboard had supplied flour to Cushman on an open account basis, payable 30 days after delivery. In the latter part of 1967, Cushman’s account with Seaboard was running substantially in arrears, and it owed Seaboard $31,624.65 on its last five flour shipments.

Following several meetings between officers of Cushman and Seaboard and after Seaboard’s officer had examined Cushman’s finances, Seaboard, in January, 1968, agreed to lend Cushman $75,-000 for working capital, to be secured by second mortgages on real and personal property located in Portland and by an assignment of a second mortgage on the Lynn plant, which Cushman Baking Company held to secure an inter-company indebtedness of $100,000. Seaboard also agreed to extend $25,000 in credit for flour shipments payable 30 days after delivery.

Although Seaboard was to supply the money for the loan, it was to be granted in the name of Bakers as Seaboard’s nominee. Bakers is an affiliated corporation which had customarily acted as Seaboard’s nominee in loan transactions. Bakers is controlled by the individuals who control Seaboard and is a “paper *26 Corporation” with no assets, income, or profits. As part of the loan transaction, it was also agreed that Cushman would purchase from Seaboard a minimum of 50,000 cwt of flour annually (nearly double the average quantity purchased by Cushman from Seaboard over the last three years), so long as any part of the $75,000 loan remained unpaid. This part of the agreement was incorporated into a Flour Purchase Agreement signed on February 16, 1968. It was contemplated that Seaboard would be secured for future flour shipments by an assignment from Bakers of the mortgages given as security for the $75,000 loan.

On March 4, 1968, before the loan transaction was closed, Seaboard stopped shipments to Cushman because Cushman was too far behind in its payments on account. The loan was closed on March 6, 1968. The documents reflect that on February 12, 1968 Union Mutual Life Company (hereinafter referred to as “Union Mutual”), the holder of the first mortgage on Cushman’s Portland realty, consented to Cushman’s giving a second mortgage on its Portland real estate. At the closing, Bakers’ check for $75,000 was delivered to Cushman, and Cushman delivered its promissory note dated February 16, 1968 for $75,000 to Bakers. This note was secured by three documents: (1) a second mortgage on Cushman’s real property in Portland dated February 16, 1968; (2) a second mortgage on Cushman’s personal property in Portland dated February 12, 1968; and (3) an assignment of the second mortgage on Cushman’s Lynn property. The second mortgage on the Portland real estate was recorded in the Cumberland County, Maine, Registry of Deeds on March 6, 1968. Two financing statements to perfect the second security interest in the Portland personal property were filed, one in the Cumberland County Registry of Deeds and the other in the office of the Secretary of State of Maine, both on March 8, 1968. The real estate mortgage identifies Cushman Baking Company as the mortgagor and Bakers as the mortgagee. The financing statements identify Cushman Baking Company as the debtor and Bakers as the secured party. The assignment of the security instruments from Bakers to Seaboard to secure future flour shipments was never executed, and, because of this failure, Seaboard conceded that its claim for the flour shipped to Cushman after March 6, 1968 is unsecured. Upon receiving Bakers’ check for $75,000 at the March 6 closing, Cushman gave Seaboard a check for $73,961.67, representing Cushman’s then current indebtedness for flour shipments plus, the price of the two February shipments which had been stopped in transit and which were then released by Seaboard.

Subsequent to the loan closing, Seaboard continued to ship Cushman between $25,000 and $30,000 worth of flour monthly. During the four months preceding the filing of Chapter XI proceedings on August 13, 1968, Cushman paid Seaboard $101,941.02 for shipments totalling $144,698.01. As a result, as of the date of the Chapter XI proceedings, Cushman owed Seaboard $42,756.99. During this four month period, Cushman paid three monthly installments due on the $75,000 note, each in the amount of $2,333. Accordingly, as of the date of the Chapter XI proceedings, Cushman owed Bakers $65,561.51 for principal and interest on the note. The bankruptcy court found, and the district court accepted this finding, that Cushman Baking Company and Cushman Bakery were individually and collectively insolvent, within the meaning of § 60(a) of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 96(a), at all times during the four month period prior to the initiation of the Chapter XI proceedings on August 13, 1968.

On June 2, 1969, after it became apparent that a plan could not be proposed under Chapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 701 et seq., both Cushman Baking Company and Cushman Bakery were adjudicated bankrupt pursuant to § 376(2) of the Act, 11 U.S.C. § 776(2). Thereafter, on September 29, 1969, Bakers filed a proof of claim and a petition to establish a lien in the amount *27 of $65,561.51, based upon the $75,000 note and the real and personal property second mortgages given by Cushman Baking Company to Bakers on March 6, 1968. Also on September 29, 1969, Seaboard filed a proof of claim and a petition to establish a lien in the amount of $42,756.99, based upon the February 16, 1968 Flour Purchase Agreement and an assignment from Bakers to Seaboard of the Cushman Baking Company note and second mortgages. As previously indicated, however, Seaboard eventually conceded that its claim was unsecured since the contemplated assignment had not been made.

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Bluebook (online)
526 F.2d 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cushman-bakery-and-cushman-baking-company-appeal-of-jacob-agger-ca1-1976.