In Re Four Seasons Marine & Cycle, Inc.

263 B.R. 764, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 729
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Texas
DecidedJune 1, 2001
Docket19-40030
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 263 B.R. 764 (In Re Four Seasons Marine & Cycle, 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 Four Seasons Marine & Cycle, Inc., 263 B.R. 764, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 729 (Tex. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

BILL G. PARKER, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter came before the Court for hearing and determination of the “Motion for an Accounting, Adequate Protection, Payment of Post-Petition Claims, and to Show Cause” (the “Motion”) filed by Deutsche Financial Services Corporation (“DFS”). Following a rather circuitous route, the sole issue remaining for the Court to consider is whether DFS should be awarded a replacement lien, a priority administrative claim, or a judgment imposing personal liability against the Debtor’s two principal officers, or any or all of the above, arising from its assertion that Four Seasons Marine & Cycle, Inc., in its capacity as a Debtor-in-Possession, failed to *766 segregate and to account for certain funds constituting the cash collateral of DFS. This memorandum of decision disposes of all issues pending before the Court. 1

Background

On June 24, 1999, Four Seasons Marine and Cycle, Inc. (the “Debtor” or “Debtor-in-Possession”) filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. Among its secured creditors was DFS which asserted a secured claim of approximately $2,274,626.54 arising from “floor plan” financing which it provided to the Debtor prior to and following the filing of the bankruptcy case. To secure the payment of its claim, DFS asserted a comprehensive and properly perfected security interest in virtually all of the Debt- or’s assets, including its inventory and equipment. 2

On June 29, 1999, five days after the bankruptcy filing, DFS filed a motion to prohibit the Debtor’s continued use of cash collateral. In that motion, DFS asserted that, in the pre-petition period, the Debtor had sold DFS collateral valued at $221,400.00 for which no sale proceeds had been forwarded to DFS. Upon request by DFS filed on July 7, 1999, the Court scheduled an emergency hearing on DFS’ motion which was conducted two days later on July 9,1999. 3

On the date of the preliminary hearing, DFS, the Debtor, and another secured creditor, Transamerica Commercial Finance Corporation (“Transamerica”), announced an interim agreement for the Debtor’s use of cash collateral pending the final hearing which the Court scheduled for July 23, 1999. This interim agreement was later reduced to writing and entered on July 17, 1999. Under the interim cash collateral order, the Debtor acknowledged that it had existing account balances totaling approximately $137,000.00 which it represented to be all of the sale proceeds of DFS and Transamerica inventory received by the Debtor from June 24,1999 to July 9, 1999. The parties agreed that the Debtor would immediately tender $76,000.00 to DFS and $34,000.00 to Trans-america and that it would thereafter provide to each secured party a daily list of sales of inventory. The Debtor further agreed to open separate deposit accounts in which it would place the proceeds arising from the sale of DFS and Trans-america inventory. The interim order allowed the Debtor to utilize the remaining sums only to pay ordinary operating expenses of its business.

During the interim period, DFS discovered that additional assets constituting its collateral had been sold out of trust and, in response to those allegations, the Court issued a sua sponte order on July 20, 1999 setting an emergency hearing for July 23rd, in conjunction with the final cash collateral hearing, for the Debtor to show cause as to why a Chapter 11 trustee should not be appointed. The Debtor consented at that show cause hearing to the appointment of a Chapter 11 trustee. The trustee appointment was immediately accomplished and, with the consent of all of the affected secured parties, the Court *767 continued the final hearing regarding cash collateral to August 12, 1999 in order to allow the trustee to ascertain the scope of the bankruptcy estate and to determine whether, in his opinion, reorganization of the entity was still a feasible option. The trustee ultimately answered that question in the negative. Thus, on August 12th, the Court granted relief from the automatic stay to both DFS and Transamerica, thereby rendering moot the remaining cash collateral issues, and, approximately two weeks later, the Chapter 11 trustee converted the case to Chapter 7.

DFS subsequently filed the present motion. After a delay engendered by an unsuccessful attempt by Stanley Swanson, the former president of the debtor corporation, to disqualify DFS’ counsel, which was denied by this Court following hearing, the Court conducted an extended evi-dentiary hearing on DFS’ motion. During the hearing, some, but not all, of the discrepancies regarding the disposition of sale proceeds of DFS’ collateral were explained. At the conclusion of that hearing, the Court issued certain oral findings and, based upon those findings, entered an interim order on February 24, 2000 (the “Interim Order”) which addressed, among other things, the need for further investigation and explanation by the Debtor and its principals regarding the apparent dissipation of DFS’ cash collateral in the time period immediately preceding and following the filing of the Debtor’s voluntary Chapter 11 petition. 4 Specifically, the Interim Order required the debtor corporation, through its corporate representatives, to provide an accounting on or before April 24, 2000 regarding the disposition of assets arising from four (4) particular transactions:

Invoice# Unit# Mfg. Product Model# Serial#
1. 174093-18 063506-1 Four WI Boat 214 Candía FWNCX016H899
062839-8 TritLP Boat TR180DC ZE8129G899 05 OO 1 — i
062839-9 TritLP Boat engine 150L XR6 OG815262 05 CO T — 1
3. 52321-12 057692-5 Lowe Boat engine J50TSLEC 4444501
58049-31 060060-3 Lowe Boat L215EC L825PJ
58049-31 060060^ Lowe Boat trailer B2021EC 002782
4. 176747-13 064534-8 Four WI Boat 170H MA175J899

The Interim Order further provided that DFS or the Chapter 7 Trustee could file a response to the accounting within 10 days of its filing and that the Court’s consideration of the remaining requests for relief asserted by DFS would be continued to a future date.

On April 24, 2000, the Debtor corporation, in compliance with the Interim Order, filed a “Debtor’s Accounting Report” re *768 garding the sale of the seven assets in the four sales transactions referenced by the Court. 5 Though considerable paperwork was attached as exhibits, the accounting actually offered little in terms of definitively- determining the Debtor’s actions with regard to DFS’ cash collateral.

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Related

In Re Bravo Enterprises USA, LLC
331 B.R. 459 (M.D. Florida, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 B.R. 764, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-four-seasons-marine-cycle-inc-txeb-2001.