In Re Frontier Mobile Home Sales, Inc. General Electric Credit Corporation v. Dale McCoy Trustee
This text of 635 F.2d 726 (In Re Frontier Mobile Home Sales, Inc. General Electric Credit Corporation v. Dale McCoy Trustee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The trustee in bankruptcy appeals from a judgment entered in the district court 1 of the Eastern District of Arkansas finding that appellee General Electric Credit Corp. (hereinafter GECC) had a security interest in a mobile home superior to that of appellant by virtue of Ark.Stat.Ann. § 85-9-306(5)(a) (Supp.1979). For the reasons discussed below, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
in 1971, Frontier Mobile Home Sales, Inc. (hereinafter Frontier or the bankrupt), entered into two agreements with GECC. The first was a financial agreement under which GECC extended credit to Frontier for the purchase of inventory; the second was an assignment to GECC by Frontier of all chattel paper arising from the sale of the inventory. Frontier sold the mobile home in question to Percy and Jean Craig. Pursuant to the second agreement, the chattel paper was assigned to GECC, which noted its lien on the certificate of title. 2 Thereafter, the Craigs defaulted. Frontier repossessed the mobile home and placed it on its lot for resale. The mobile home was still being held for sale when Frontier filed its bankruptcy petition. After Frontier’s bankruptcy petition was filed, GECC unsuccessfully filed for possession of the mobile home. Instead, the mobile home was sold and the proceeds (approximately $3,800)' held pending the resolution of this dispute.
The bankruptcy court ruled that GECC’s security interest was superior to the trustee’s lien because § 85-9-306(5)(a) applied and GECC’s security interest in the inventory held for sale reattached to the mobile home upon repossession. On appeal to the district court, the trustee challenged whether the provisions of § 85-9-306(5)(a) were properly met. In particular, the trustee challenged whether any money was owed under the original financing agreement because Frontier had assigned the chattel paper to GECC. The district court affirmed the decision of the bankruptcy court and rejected the trustee’s contention. The district court held that Frontier, despite the assignment, was still obligated to GECC for any outstanding balance in the event the purchasers defaulted.
For reversal the trustee raises a new contention, not presented to the bankruptcy court or the district court, that GECC forfeited or subrogated its perfected security *728 interest in the inventory by acquiring a lien under the chattel paper. The trustee argues that GECC can only assert this latter interest, which, in the view of the trustee, is unperfected and thus inferior to the trustee’s lien. The trustee does not reassert before this court the argument made below that the requirements of § 85-9-306(5)(a) were not met because money was not still owing.
We note initially that the trustee’s argument on appeal presupposes that GECC did not perfect its lien on the mobile home. The record reveals that GECC noted its lien on the certificate of title of the mobile home in accordance with Arkansas law. Our review of Arkansas law indicates that a notation of the lien on the certificate of title is the correct means of perfecting a security interest in the mobile home. Ark. Stat.Ann. §§ 75-102, 132.1, 160, 161 (1979). Thus, even if we accepted the trustee’s argument about which security interest GECC can claim, the trustee would not prevail because GECC has a perfected security interest superior to the trustee’s lien under either the inventory or the chattel paper approach. We do not decide the case on this basis, however, because it appears that the issue of whether GECC properly perfected its lien on the mobile home was not directly presented to or decided by the district court.
There are three critical stages of time which affect the type of security interest or interests GECC has. They are (1) before the sale, (2) after the sale, and (3) after repossession. Before the sale a purchase money lender has a perfected security interest in the collateral (the mobile home), if he has duly filed. After the sale the perfected security interest of the purchase money lender continues only in the proceeds, if he consented to the sale. This is the result of § 85-9-306(2). 3 By virtue of his prior filing the purchase money lender has no perfected security interest against the collateral in the hands of the buyer. The purchase money lender, however, can acquire an after sale security interest in the collateral, if the chattel paper is assigned and, as in the present case, the lien is noted on the certificate of title. Thus, after the sale a purchase money lender can have two perfected security interests: one against the seller for the proceeds arising out of the inventory financial agreement and another against the buyer for the collateral arising out of the assignment of the chattel paper.
The third stage is entered only upon default by the buyer. If the seller repossesses the property, then under § 85-9-306(5)(a) 4 the purchase money lender’s pri- or perfected security interest in the collateral reattaches and is considered as if it were in effect continuously. In other words, the perfected security interests shifts from collateral to proceeds upon the sale and back again from proceeds to collateral automatically upon repossession. The one condition of § 85-9-309(5)(a) is that *729 “the goods were collateral at the time of sale, for an indebtedness of the seller which is still unpaid .... ”
In the present case GECC initially had a perfected security interest in the collateral arising from the inventory financial agreement. After Frontier sold the mobile home, GECC continued to have a perfected security interest against the seller (Frontier) in the proceeds of the sale by the operation of § 85-9-306(2). GECC also acquired a perfected security interest against the buyer (the Craigs) in the collateral by virtue of the assignment of the chattel paper and the notation of the lien on the certificate of title. Thus, the trustee correctly asserts that GECC has two distinct security interests, but fails to distinguish GECC’s chattel paper security against the buyer for the collateral from its inventory security interest against the seller for the proceeds. The trustee confuses the two security interests and treats them as interchangeable. Using this erroneous characterization, the trustee argues that the chattel paper security interest supersedes the inventory security interest and that, upon repossession, GECC cannot avail itself of § 85-9-306(5)(a), but stands against the seller with only the chattel paper security interest. 5 We disagree.
An analogous case strongly implies that the acquisition of an after the sale security interest in the collateral is not an abdication of the pre-existing purchase money security interest or of the benefits of § 85-9-306(5)(a). In In re Mid State Wood Products Co., 323 F.Supp. 853 (N.D.Ill.1971), a purchase money lender had a perfected security interest in the proceeds of the sale of inventory under the operation of sections 9-306(a) and 9-312(3) of the U.C.C.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
635 F.2d 726, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 704, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 11147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-frontier-mobile-home-sales-inc-general-electric-credit-corporation-ca8-1980.