In re Dart Drug Stores, Inc.

144 B.R. 299, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 2121
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedDecember 10, 1991
DocketBankruptcy Nos. 89-4-2347-PM to 89-4-2357-PM
StatusPublished

This text of 144 B.R. 299 (In re Dart Drug Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Dart Drug Stores, Inc., 144 B.R. 299, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 2121 (D. Md. 1991).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

(Motion for Allowance of Administrative Expenses Filed by General Electric Company)

PAUL MANNES, Chief Judge.

Before the court is the application of the General Electric Company for the allowance of an administrative claim under 11 U.S.C. § 503(b)(1)(A). That section provides:

§ 503. Allowance of administrative expenses
(b) After notice and a hearing, there shall be allowed administrative expenses, other than claims allowed under section 502(f) of this title, including—
(1)(A) The actual, necessary costs and expenses of preserving the estate, including wages, salaries or commissions for services rendered after the commencement of the case.

The motion is opposed by the debtor in possession.

Dart Drug Stores, Inc. (“DART”) was a publicly held chain of retail drug stores that was the subject of a leveraged buyout [301]*301in 1984. At a later date, a second ownership group took over and was unable to deal with massive levels of debt in the face of a diminished market share and intense competition in its markets. The debtor has shut down its retail operations.

The movant, General Electric Company (“GE”) is an unsecured creditor and a member of the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors. The significance of this motion is that if the within claim is allowed as an administrative claim, GE achieves a priority status to the detriment of creditors without security. Therefore, the alignment of the parties is not so much DART versus GE but DART as representative of the unsecured creditor body against GE, because, to the extent that the claim is disallowed as an administrative claim, it will be allowed as an unsecured claim pari passu with other unsecured creditors.

The issue before the court is unique in that it was allowed to fester and become difficult to resolve because of a prolonged hibernation on both sides. It is incomprehensible that both GE and DART would have let this issue lie unresolved by not following up upon the terms of an agreement made October 20, 1989, between responsible officers on both sides. That agreement called for the ascertainment of a level of the consigned stock of what are called GE Large Lamps that was in DART’s stores and warehouses on August 8, 1989, the date that the debtor filed its petition under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. The issue for the court to determine is what was the level of DART’s GE Large Lamp inventory on that date?

THE FACTS

GE and DART had a business relationship for well over 20 years. On July 1, 1984, GE and the debtor entered into another consignment agreement whereby GE as consignor maintained the Large Lamp stock in debtor’s stores and warehouses held for sale to the debtor’s customers. Under the terms of the consignment agreement, GE retained,ownership of the lamps until sale. The agreement was automatically renewed from year to year. Payment was to be made each month when lamps were sold. Payment would come either at the time lamps were purchased or when DART took an itemized inventory. The amount of the payment was made based upon withdrawals from consigned stock (“The withdrawals from consigned stock shall be measured by the difference between the value of the previous consigned stock plus shipments made since the previous inventory pursuant to Distributors Orders and the value of such inventory.”).

Following the filing of a petition under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, GE and DART entered into discussions leading to the post-petition consignment agreement dated October 20, 1989, and filed herein as an attachment to GE’s Exhibit No. 1 (“Agreement”). The letter states in part at page 2:

Over a period of several years prior to the filing of its petition, Dart reduced the stock of consigned inventory by ordering fewer replacement untis than it sold. Since GE was paid only to the extent that Dart ordered replacement units, this reduction in consigned inventory resulted in a debt owed to GE for Large Lamps sold during the prepetition period. The amount of that debt is equal to the value of the inventory originally consigned to Dart minus the value of the consigned inventory that was on hand as of the petition date.

It was acknowledged by all concerned that the consigned inventory was substantially less than the “book” inventory shown, for example, on GE’s Exhibit No. 3 of $758,-920.41. This was caused by the closing of eleven DART stores, the termination of the Dart Home Center operation, the general reduction of inventory, and the downsizing of the DART operation in general. Because of DART’s pre-filing cash problems, orders were not placed that would have brought the inventory up to “book,” nor would reordering have been desirable because of the drastically diminished size of the operation.

Both sides understood that the actual inventory was substantially less than “book.” Therefore, there was provided at [302]*302paragraph 3 of the Agreement the following language:

3. Consignment of Large Lamps. The existing consignment arrangement will be cancelled and GE and Dart will enter into a new consignment arrangement as follows:
a. Dart will ascertain the level and value of the consigned stock of GE Large Lamps that was in Dart’s stores and warehouse on the petition date (the “Petition Date Consigned Stock”) by taking a physical inventory of GE Large Lamps and adding to it the numbers and values of Large Lamps sold by Dart since the petition date, as indicated by Dart’s point-of-sale computer system records.
b. To the extent the value of the stock of Large Lamps consigned to Dart, as shown on GE’s books, exceeds the value of the Petition Date Consigned Stock, GE shall have an allowed prepetition unsecured claim.
c. Upon execution of this letter agreement by both parties, Dart will pay GE for all Large Lamps sold since the Petition Date, as indicated by Dart’s point-of-sale computer system records.
d. Upon execution of this letter agreement by both parties, Dart may order and GE will deliver Large Lamps to replace consigned stock sold since the Petition Date (the “Initial Replacement Order”).

Contrary to what was contemplated, what followed was that neither party followed up policing this provision regarding inventory. At trial, DART offered in evidence as its Exhibit No. 3 a document purporting to show that the value of the inventory that date was in the sum of $123,302. That, added to the calculation of actual sales of Large Lamps taken from sales terminals, demonstrated an inventory as of the date of the filing of the petition of $244,572. DART’s marketing department, charged with the responsibility of ascertaining the inventory, never passed the information on to its Accounts Payable Department that was charged with paying the monthly bills. That department blithely kept on paying the bills and returning the GE lamp reports showing the “book” inventory that everyone knew was incorrect.

The difficulty with this, and what made it particularly awkward for DART, was that it had no record of forwarding its Exhibit No. 3 to GE at any time prior to February 13, 1991, when it was transmitted by facsimile transmission to the office of counsel for GE. George E.

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