In Re Greenwood Supply Co.

295 B.R. 787, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 1694, 2002 WL 32136256
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. South Carolina
DecidedMarch 14, 2002
Docket19-00515
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 295 B.R. 787 (In Re Greenwood Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Greenwood Supply Co., 295 B.R. 787, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 1694, 2002 WL 32136256 (S.C. 2002).

Opinion

ORDER

JOHN E. WAITES, Bankruptcy Judge.

THIS MATTER comes before the Court upon the Motion to Dismiss Petition or for Relief from Automatic Stay (the “Motion”) filed by Brantley M. Adams, Sr., Martha Adams, Brantley M. Adams, Jr., Christine Scott Adams, and Matthew Wilson Adams (collectively, the “Minority Shareholders”). The Minority Shareholders argue that Greenwood Supply Company (“Debtor”) filed its Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition in bad faith in an attempt to avoid pending civil litigation in state court (the “State Court Action”) and, because of this bad faith filing, the Court should dismiss Debtor’s bankruptcy case pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1112(b). 1 Alternatively, the Minority Shareholders request the Court to grant them relief from the automatic stay pursuant to § 362(d) to permit them to pursue the State Court Action in state court. Debtor objects to the Motion and argues that, based on the two-prong test articulated by the Fourth Circuit in Carolin Corporation v. Miller, 886 F.2d 693 (4th Cir.1989), the Minority Shareholders cannot prove that the Chapter 11 case is both objectively futile and that Debtor filed the case in subjective bad faith. In addition, Debtor objects to the Minority Shareholders’ request for the lifting of the automatic stay to allow them to prosecute the State Court Action because the Minority Shareholders’ causes of action constitute a derivative suit that, upon Debtor’s filing bankruptcy, became property of the bankruptcy estate. After considering the pleadings and the arguments and evidence the parties presented at the hearing on the Motion, the Court makes the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law pursuant to Federal Rule 52 of Civil Procedure, applicable in bankruptcy proceedings by Federal Rule 7052 of Bankruptcy Procedure. 2

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Debtor is a corporation that operates a retail store in Greenwood, South Carolina. The store sells industrial supplies, hardware, and sporting goods and has been in business since the 1930s. Currently, it employs twenty-nine full-time employees and sixteen part-time employees.

2. Debtor has issued a total of 1,845 common shares, and members of the Adams family own all of the stock. Although there are eleven shareholders, the shareholders are essentially divided into two blocs with Joe E. Adams, Jr. and his family owning approximately 76% of the shares and the Minority Shareholders owning approximately 24% of the shares.

3. Debtor owns assets, including real property, inventory, and equipment.

a. Debtor’s real property is its office and warehouse located at 1225 Highway 72 Bypass NW, Greenwood, South Carolina. The real estate has been appraised between $900,000.00 and $1,100,000.00, and no liens encumber it. Debtor also owns *791 property located at 120 Maxwell Avenue, also in Greenwood. Debtor values the Maxwell Avenue property at $67,000.00, and no liens encumber this property either.

b. Debtor has inventory that it values at approximately $1,700,000.00 with a replacement cost of approximately $2,200,000.00.

c. Debtor acknowledges ownership of machinery and equipment used in the business but does not provide a value for these items.

d. Debtor acknowledges it had accounts receivable at the time of filing worth approximately $540,000.00.

4. Debtor’s liabilities do not include debts to secured creditors. Debtor has one unsecured priority creditor with claims of approximately $19,000.00 and a number of unsecured non-priority creditors with claims totaling approximately $1,250,000.00.

5. Several problems pushed Debtor to filing bankruptcy. They include the following:

a. Debtor’s total revenue peaked in 1993-1995 when its revenue equaled or was in excess of $7,000,000.00 annually. Since 1995, Debtor’s revenue has decreased, and, in 2001, its revenue was less than $5,000,000.00.

b. In 1995, Debtor’s pre-tax income totaled approximately $200,000.00. Since 1995, the pre-tax income has decreased, and, in 2001, its pre-tax income was $200,000.00.

c. On November 11, 1999, the Minority Shareholders instituted the State Court Action against Debtor and its majority shareholders seeking (1) judicial dissolution, or orders directing, limiting, or prohibiting acts of Debtor or shareholders, directors, or officers, or the purchase at fair value of the Minority Shareholders’ shares by Debtor or other shareholders and (2) an accounting by the majority shareholders, and, upon the finding of self-dealing, waste, or breach of trust and other fiduciary obligations, the restoration of this amount by the majority shareholders to the corporation.

6. Debtor finances its business operations through two lines of unsecured credit provided by The County Bank located in Greenwood, South Carolina. Each line provides for credit of $500,000.00, and Debtor’s ability to receive this credit is based in part upon Joe E. Adams, Jr., the Chairman of Debtor, providing a personal guaranty.

7. When Debtor filed bankruptcy, it had drawn approximately $250,000.00 on one of its lines of credit to pay its debts. Debtor is current in its payments to The County Bank.

8. On the date the State Court Action was scheduled to go to trial, December 19, 2001, Debtor filed its bankruptcy petition.

CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

I. Dismissal of the Bankruptcy Case Pursuant to § 1112(b).

In the Fourth Circuit, the standard for dismissing a Chapter 11 case as a bad faith filing is that the moving party must prove (1) the objective futility of the Chapter 11 case and (2) the subjective bad faith in filing the case. See Carolin Corp. v. Miller, 886 F.2d 693, 700 (4th Cir.1989). The Carolin Court noted that the moving party’s burden is demanding, explaining,

This [two prong test] ... is the only sufficiently stringent test of justification for threshold denials of Chapter 11 relief. Such a test obviously contemplates that it is better to risk proceeding with a wrongly motivated invocation of Chapter 11 protections whose futility is not im *792 mediately manifest than to risk cutting off even a remote chance that a reorganization effort so motivated might nevertheless yield a successful rehabilitation. Just as obviously, it contemplates that it is better to risk wastefulness of a probably futile but good faith effort to reorganize than it is to risk error in prejudging futility at the threshold. Id. at 701.

Indeed, the Carolin Court succinctly summarized its cautiousness of dismissing a case shortly after its petition date by describing a dismissal at this point as “inherently drastic and not lightly to be made.” Id. at 700.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
295 B.R. 787, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 1694, 2002 WL 32136256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-greenwood-supply-co-scb-2002.