MEMORANDUM OPINION
STEWART ROSE, Bankruptcy Judge.
This matter comes before the Court on remand from the District Court for further proceedings in which this Court is to reconsider, in light of several cited cases, whether the circumstances warrant treatment of First Bank of Billings, Montana’s claim as an administrative expense priority claim.
The basic facts are set forth in the District Court’s Memorandum Opinion and Order entered May 24, 1982. Suffice it to say that Glover, Inc., a Roswell, New Mexico meat packer, kept a “remote disbursement account” at the Bank, allowing Glover to “float” checks. By agreement, Glover was required to maintain an account balance of $202,000. When checks made their way to Montana and were presented, normal procedure called for the Bank to request and receive wire transfers of funds from Glover, sufficient to maintain the balance, pri- or to honoring the checks.
In this case, checks were issued by Glover pre-petition,
and presented beginning July 7, 1980, after Glover filed its Chapter 11 Petition.
For unknown reasons (the Bank officer involved testified in deposition that he had no memory as to what had transpired) the Bank did not receive a wire transfer, but did not dishonor the checks within its 24-hour rule dead-line (midnight of the second business day after presentment). The result of this failure was that the Bank was forced to honor the checks and to make what amounted to an inadvertent loan to Glover, since the account was overdrawn at the time. The Bank received notice of the bankruptcy July 14, 1980. Glover converted to Chapter 7 March 13, 1981.
Attempting to salvage what it could, the Bank asked that the loan be accorded administrative expense priority. It later amended its request to include funds which were transferred from the Bank at Glover’s request on July 1, 1980 to pay insurance premiums.
After a hearing, Judge Puccini on July 24,1981 denied the request. On appeal, the District Court remanded the case to consider if there were unusual eir-
cumstanees which might justify a
nunc pro tunc
award; on further appeal, the Tenth Circuit determined that the District Court’s order of remand was not appeala-ble.
The cases cited by the District Court
are Bankruptcy Act cases in which generally either the creditor advanced the debtor’s estate more funds than the court had actually authorized, or the creditor had knowingly advanced funds to a bankrupt estate under circumstances in which the creditor could have believed the court had authorized the borrowing; circumstances under which the courts involved found it equitable to provide
nunc pro tunc
authorization and priority status.
Enactment of the Bankruptcy Code altered the conduct of reorganizations. Formerly, in Chapter XI and XII arrangements, court authorization and court supervision were required if the trustee or debt- or-in-possession was to be permitted to operate the business. Now, under 11 U.S.C. § 1108,
the debtor automatically remains in business without interruptions. Under 11 U.S.C. § 1107, the debtor-in-possession is given all the rights and powers of the trustee, and unless sufficient cause is shown, there will be no trustee involved in the reorganization, 11 U.S.C. § 1104.
Thus, there is no longer a clearly defined demarcation between the pre-petition operating entity and the post-petition operating entity. There is no hiatus while the reorganizing entity awaits operating authority; it continues its pre-petition business activities with its pre-petition personnel, albeit with the rights, powers and privileges granted by the Code. Hence, the possibility arises that a creditor which has extended credit to a financially troubled entity may, because notice of the bankruptcy has not been received, continue to extend credit to a post-petition entity on the same basis. Without such notice, the creditor may have no knowledge of any business reason to alter its credit policy.
Creditors are often loathe to knowingly extend credit to entities in reorganization. Apart from the onus of bankruptcy, payments may be deferred months or years even if the reorganization is a complete success. If the reorganization fails, and the case is converted to Chapter 7, claims arising post-petition, pre-conversion are treated under 11 U.S.C. 348(d),
as pre-petition claims. This type of claim is entitled only to a pro-rata share of the assets distributed, unless it is a valid administrative expense.
Recognizing this reluctance, Congress, in Code § 364 structured an escalating series of inducements which the debtor-in-possession may offer while attempting to obtain credit for use in the reorganization.
First, under § 364(a) the debtor may obtain unsecured credit needed in the ordinary course of business, and accord that credit adminis
trative expense priority, simply by offering the priority.
If the creditor is reluctant to advance credit, a super-priority, or liens junior to other encumbrances on property of the estate, may be offered, subject to court approval, under § 364(c). For the most recalcitrant and necessary creditors, the court, under § 346(d) may authorize the obtaining of credit secured by liens senior to or of equal priority to existing liens on property of the estate, as long as the existing lien holders are adequately protected.
Thus, under the Code, it is possible that some post-petition creditors, upon conversion to Chapter 7, will enjoy administrative expense priority, and some will not. Mere post-petition incurrence is no longer in itself a guarantee of administrative priority. Applying the Act’s automatic administrative expense priority to claims incurred by the Chapter 11 entity prior to conversion to Chapter 7 would render § 348(d) meaningless. The section does not distinguish between the origins of claims, only whether they have administrative expense priority. Therefore, it is unlikely that a damage claim of the type dealt with in
Brown
would be given priority today.
A recent Seventh Circuit decision,
In the Matter of Jartran, Inc.,
732 F.2d 584 (1984) upheld the Bankruptcy Court’s denial of administrative expense priority in circumstances similar to this ease.
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MEMORANDUM OPINION
STEWART ROSE, Bankruptcy Judge.
This matter comes before the Court on remand from the District Court for further proceedings in which this Court is to reconsider, in light of several cited cases, whether the circumstances warrant treatment of First Bank of Billings, Montana’s claim as an administrative expense priority claim.
The basic facts are set forth in the District Court’s Memorandum Opinion and Order entered May 24, 1982. Suffice it to say that Glover, Inc., a Roswell, New Mexico meat packer, kept a “remote disbursement account” at the Bank, allowing Glover to “float” checks. By agreement, Glover was required to maintain an account balance of $202,000. When checks made their way to Montana and were presented, normal procedure called for the Bank to request and receive wire transfers of funds from Glover, sufficient to maintain the balance, pri- or to honoring the checks.
In this case, checks were issued by Glover pre-petition,
and presented beginning July 7, 1980, after Glover filed its Chapter 11 Petition.
For unknown reasons (the Bank officer involved testified in deposition that he had no memory as to what had transpired) the Bank did not receive a wire transfer, but did not dishonor the checks within its 24-hour rule dead-line (midnight of the second business day after presentment). The result of this failure was that the Bank was forced to honor the checks and to make what amounted to an inadvertent loan to Glover, since the account was overdrawn at the time. The Bank received notice of the bankruptcy July 14, 1980. Glover converted to Chapter 7 March 13, 1981.
Attempting to salvage what it could, the Bank asked that the loan be accorded administrative expense priority. It later amended its request to include funds which were transferred from the Bank at Glover’s request on July 1, 1980 to pay insurance premiums.
After a hearing, Judge Puccini on July 24,1981 denied the request. On appeal, the District Court remanded the case to consider if there were unusual eir-
cumstanees which might justify a
nunc pro tunc
award; on further appeal, the Tenth Circuit determined that the District Court’s order of remand was not appeala-ble.
The cases cited by the District Court
are Bankruptcy Act cases in which generally either the creditor advanced the debtor’s estate more funds than the court had actually authorized, or the creditor had knowingly advanced funds to a bankrupt estate under circumstances in which the creditor could have believed the court had authorized the borrowing; circumstances under which the courts involved found it equitable to provide
nunc pro tunc
authorization and priority status.
Enactment of the Bankruptcy Code altered the conduct of reorganizations. Formerly, in Chapter XI and XII arrangements, court authorization and court supervision were required if the trustee or debt- or-in-possession was to be permitted to operate the business. Now, under 11 U.S.C. § 1108,
the debtor automatically remains in business without interruptions. Under 11 U.S.C. § 1107, the debtor-in-possession is given all the rights and powers of the trustee, and unless sufficient cause is shown, there will be no trustee involved in the reorganization, 11 U.S.C. § 1104.
Thus, there is no longer a clearly defined demarcation between the pre-petition operating entity and the post-petition operating entity. There is no hiatus while the reorganizing entity awaits operating authority; it continues its pre-petition business activities with its pre-petition personnel, albeit with the rights, powers and privileges granted by the Code. Hence, the possibility arises that a creditor which has extended credit to a financially troubled entity may, because notice of the bankruptcy has not been received, continue to extend credit to a post-petition entity on the same basis. Without such notice, the creditor may have no knowledge of any business reason to alter its credit policy.
Creditors are often loathe to knowingly extend credit to entities in reorganization. Apart from the onus of bankruptcy, payments may be deferred months or years even if the reorganization is a complete success. If the reorganization fails, and the case is converted to Chapter 7, claims arising post-petition, pre-conversion are treated under 11 U.S.C. 348(d),
as pre-petition claims. This type of claim is entitled only to a pro-rata share of the assets distributed, unless it is a valid administrative expense.
Recognizing this reluctance, Congress, in Code § 364 structured an escalating series of inducements which the debtor-in-possession may offer while attempting to obtain credit for use in the reorganization.
First, under § 364(a) the debtor may obtain unsecured credit needed in the ordinary course of business, and accord that credit adminis
trative expense priority, simply by offering the priority.
If the creditor is reluctant to advance credit, a super-priority, or liens junior to other encumbrances on property of the estate, may be offered, subject to court approval, under § 364(c). For the most recalcitrant and necessary creditors, the court, under § 346(d) may authorize the obtaining of credit secured by liens senior to or of equal priority to existing liens on property of the estate, as long as the existing lien holders are adequately protected.
Thus, under the Code, it is possible that some post-petition creditors, upon conversion to Chapter 7, will enjoy administrative expense priority, and some will not. Mere post-petition incurrence is no longer in itself a guarantee of administrative priority. Applying the Act’s automatic administrative expense priority to claims incurred by the Chapter 11 entity prior to conversion to Chapter 7 would render § 348(d) meaningless. The section does not distinguish between the origins of claims, only whether they have administrative expense priority. Therefore, it is unlikely that a damage claim of the type dealt with in
Brown
would be given priority today.
A recent Seventh Circuit decision,
In the Matter of Jartran, Inc.,
732 F.2d 584 (1984) upheld the Bankruptcy Court’s denial of administrative expense priority in circumstances similar to this ease. There Jar-tran, a truck rental firm, placed an order for yellow-pages advertisements with two advertising agencies. No payment from Jartran was required at the time. Before payment was due, Jartran filed a Chapter 11 petition. Because of the nature of the business, the advertisements could not be cancelled, and they duly appeared post-petition. The agencies themselves were liable on the bill, over $1,000,000, and requested their claims be granted administrative priority in that the advertisements assisted Jartran’s reorganization. The Circuit’s opinion made clear that the purpose of administrative priority is to give the debtor-in-possession a bargaining chip with which to induce creditors or third parties to extend further credit:
The policies underlying the provisions of § 503 ... are not hard to discern. If a reorganization is to succeed, creditors asked to extend credit after the petition is filed must be given priority so they will be moved to furnish the necessary credit to enable the bankrupt to function ... Thus, [w]hen third parties are induced to supply goods or services to the debtor-in-possession ... the purposes of [§ 503] plainly require that their claims be afforded priority.
Id. at 586 (citations omitted). The Court went on to state:
To serve the policy of the priority, inducement of the creditor’s performance
by the debtor-in-possession
is crucial to a claim for administrative priority in the context of the furnishing of goods or services to the debtor.
Id. at 587. The
Jartran
panel found no inducement by the debtor-in-possession and affirmed the denial of the request.
As one bankruptcy court put it:
The clear intent of § 364(a) is to allow the trustee or debtor-in-possession to use the administrative priority of § 507(a)(1) as an inducement to lenders
after the commencement of the case
to open lines of credit to the debtor for purposes of reorganization.
In re Allen Carpet Shops, Inc.,
27 B.R. 354 (Bankr.E.D.N.Y.1983) at 358 (emphasis in original).
The question put to this Court by the District Court is whether there exist any grounds for the Court’s use of its equitable powers to grant the Bank administrative priority. The Bankruptcy Court’s discretion under the Code is far less than that which it had under the Act. Code § 364 is much more explicit in its terms than the rather vague provisions of Act §§ 116(2), 344 and 446.
Code § 364 is meant to govern “... all obtainings of credit and incurring of debt by the estate, “H.R. No. 95-989, 95th Cong. 2nd Sess. 57 (1978), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1978, pp. 5787, 5843. “Any preference for claims not intended by Congress to have priority would dilute the value of the intended priority and thus frustrate the intent of Congress,”
Jartran
at 586.
Here, the Bank placed no reliance on any representations by Glover; it took no actions based on any expectation of administration priority; it took no actions based on any perception that it was dealing with a debtor-in-possession; the circumstances of Glover’s account with it indicate the Bank knew or should have known Glover was in poor financial condition
; and its loans to Glover were caused by its own mistakes or omissions. To paraphrase
Jartran,
this court does not perceive any greater hardship to the Bank of Billings than what arises normally from financial failing and attempted reorganization. All creditors to some extent assume the risk of bankruptcy; the prudent creditor minimizes its exposure.
There being no statutory, policy or equitable basis for granting the First Bank of Billings request for administrative priority, the application will be denied.
An appropriate order will follow.