In Re Energy Contractors, Inc.

791 F.2d 1222
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 13, 1986
Docket85-3474
StatusPublished

This text of 791 F.2d 1222 (In Re Energy Contractors, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Energy Contractors, Inc., 791 F.2d 1222 (5th Cir. 1986).

Opinion

791 F.2d 1222

In re ENERGY CONTRACTORS, INC., Debtor.
M CREDIT CORPORATION (Formerly Mercantile Texas Credit
Corporation), Movant- Appellant,
v.
ENERGY CONTRACTORS INC., Garland Badeaux, Inc., Nezat
Industrial Lumber Sales, Inc., and United States
Fidelity & Guaranty Co., Respondents-Appellees.

No. 85-3474.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.

June 13, 1986.

Lawrence R. Anderson, Rex D. Rainach, Baton Rouge, La., for movant-appellant.

Paul J. McMahon, III, H. Bruce Shreves, New Orleans, La., for U.S. Fidelity & Guar. Co.

James R. Austin, Boolus J. Boohaker, Baton Rouge, La., for Donald P. Starns.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana.

Before WISDOM, RUBIN and HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judges.

ALVIN B. RUBIN, Circuit Judge:

A creditor appeals a bankruptcy court decision invalidating its purported security interest in the debtor's accounts receivable for the lender's failure to comply with the Louisiana Assignment of Accounts Receivable Act.1 Because we conclude that the lender substantially complied with the Act, we reverse the bankruptcy court and uphold the lender's privilege.

I.

Energy Contractors, Inc. (Energy) is a Louisiana corporation in the business of oil field construction. Between January 1983 and March 1984, Energy executed several promissory notes in favor of Mercantile Texas Credit Corporation (now M Credit Corporation). Energy secured its obligation with a Loan and Security Agreement, executed in August 1981, pledging Energy's existing and future accounts receivable. The parties also confected a Statement of Assignment, which they recorded in April 1983 in the conveyance records of East Baton Rouge Parish, Energy's domicile. Another Statement of Assignment was subsequently recorded in August 1983 in St. Landry Parish, the parish in which Energy's principal place of business was by then located.

Energy filed a petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code2 in June 1984. At that time, its indebtedness to M Credit exceeded $400,000. M Credit filed a motion in the proceeding seeking modification of the automatic stay3 to permit it to collect Energy's outstanding accounts receivable and apply any collected proceeds to satisfy Energy's debt to it. After a hearing, the bankruptcy court disallowed M Credit's security interest on several grounds.4 (1) The Loan and Security Agreement did not comply with the Louisiana Assignment of Accounts Receivable Act because it did not specify the operations of Energy from which the accounts were to be assigned or list Energy's proper place of business; (2) the Statement of Assignment did not provide the kind of notice required by the Act because it did not indicate the nature of the intended assignment (whether general or specific); and, (3) the statement filed in East Baton Rouge Parish did not list Energy's actual place of business. The district court affirmed.

II.

The Louisiana Assignment of Accounts Receivable Act has been amended twice since the documents in this case were drafted. Section 9:3110 now reads: "An assignor or assignee of accounts receivable made or perfected prior to [August 30, 1983] may elect to come under the provisions of this Part by filing a notice of assignment." The bankruptcy court found no evidence of such an election and concluded correctly that the documents in this case were to be measured against the statute as it existed prior to the 1983 (and 1984) amendments.

The Act provides a relatively simple two-step procedure for assigning accounts.5 First, the assignor and assignee must evidence the assignment in one of three ways: (1) by noting the assignment on the ledger sheets of the assignor; (2) by a separate agreement signed by the assignor; or (3) by programming the assignor's computer to note the assignment on the computer printout sheets.6 Second, the assignee must file a statement of assignment, signed by both parties, in the conveyance records of the parish in which the assignor is domiciled.7 As one scholar has characterized the process: "The formal requisites of the assignment are minimal and flexible."8

III.

Energy and M Credit chose to evidence their assignment by executing a separate agreement--the Loan and Security Agreement. The validity of the agreement is tested by its compliance with the 1980 version of Sec. 9:3105, which provided:

The assignment or general assignment of accounts receivable ... may be evidenced by any of the ... methods [described supra ] which in substance discloses the fact of such assignment or general assignment of accounts receivable, the date thereof and the name of the assignee....

Paragraph 2.1 of the M Credit/Energy agreement states: "Borrower hereby grants to Lender a security interest in and to all of Borrower's ... existing and future accounts." (Emphasis supplied.) The bankruptcy court recognized that the Loan and Security Agreement purported to pledge all of Energy's accounts receivable, but concluded that the agreement did not comply with Sec. 9:3105 because the language of assignment did not fit the definition of a "general assignment" as provided in the Act.

A general assignment is defined in Sec. 9:3101(7) as an assignment of all of an assignor's existing or future accounts receivable "arising out of specified operations conducted by the assignor at a place of business."9 The bankruptcy court concluded that an assignor who desires to evidence a general assignment by means of a separate agreement as permitted by Sec. 9:3105 must use language that conforms to that definition. The court held that the language used in the M Credit/Energy agreement was deficient in two respects: it failed to specify from which of Energy's "operations" the accounts were to be assigned and it did not list the correct "place of business."We disagree with the bankruptcy court's conclusion that the assignor and assignee must recite, in the document evidencing the assignment, the "specified operations" of the assignor from which accounts were to be assigned. Section 9:3101 is merely definitional. It is Sec. 9:3105 that governs the form of the agreement. That section makes no such requirement. More importantly, it states that the agreement must only disclose in substance "the fact of such assignment or general assignment." Louisiana courts have held that no special form or words are necessary to constitute a valid assignment.10 An agreement that fails to specify from which of the assignor's operations the accounts are to be assigned may create the factual question whether a specific or general assignment is intended, but the omission does not invalidate the assignment.

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Related

Agrico Chemical Co. v. EK Painting, Inc.
432 So. 2d 253 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1983)
In Re Energy Contractors, Inc.
45 B.R. 181 (M.D. Louisiana, 1984)
Rolf v. Lewis
165 So. 2d 12 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1964)

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791 F.2d 1222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-energy-contractors-inc-ca5-1986.