In Re Jeurissen

85 B.R. 531, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 525, 1988 WL 34681
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedApril 19, 1988
Docket19-40599
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 85 B.R. 531 (In Re Jeurissen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Jeurissen, 85 B.R. 531, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 525, 1988 WL 34681 (Minn. 1988).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM ORDER

NANCY C. DREHER, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter came on for hearing on February 1, 1988, on the application of Chaska Investment Limited Partnership, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 503(b)(1)(A), to determine whether certain rent claimed to be due from the debtors is an administrative expense. Arthur C. Benson appeared for movant and P. Joseph O’Neill appeared for the debtors. This court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 157 and 1334, and Local Rule 103(b). This is a core proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A) and (B). Based on all the records and files herein and on arguments of counsel, and further based on the evidence taken at the hearing, the court makes the following Memorandum Order.

FACTS

Chaska Investment Limited Partnership (“Chaska Investment”) owns approximately 2,000 cropland acres in the Chaska area which it rents to approximately 10 separate farmers. Dale Ahlquist (“Ahlquist”) has been in charge of its rental operations for several years. In that capacity he has negotiated a large volume of leases with farmers in the Chaska area.

The Debtors, Bruce E. Jeurissen (“Jeu-rissen”) and Marsha M. Jeurissen (referred to jointly as “Debtors”), have farmed approximately 1100 acres in Chaska County for many years. Included within their farming operations are approximately 400 acres of cropland which they have been renting from Chaska Investment since 1981.

On March 31, 1986, Debtors and Chaska Investment entered into the 1986 cropland lease (“the 1986 lease”). The 1986 lease included the following language:

SECTION D — TERM
1. Term — The term of this Lease shall be from April 1, 1986 to November 15, 1986, at rental rates as described in Exhibit A. Tenant agrees to surrender possession of the Property peaceably at the termination of this Lease, in a plowed condition. If Tenant fails to return the Property in a plowed condition, Tenant shall pay Landlord upon demand, Ten Dollars ($10.00) for each unplowed acre of the Property as determined by the Landlord.

It also provided that rent for the 1986 crop year was due November 15, 1986, with interest accruing thereafter at the rate of 8% per annum. The lease further provided that Chaska Investment would have a security interest in the crops for 1986 and that Jeurissen would sign a UCC-1 form so as to allow Chaska Investment to perfect that security interest. However, Chaska Investment did nothing to perfect its security interest.

The Debtors defaulted in payment of the 1986 lease rental payment in the amount of *533 $24,472.00, which came due on November 15,1986, 1 and, on December 15,1986, Debtors filed a petition for relief under Chapter 12 of the Bankruptcy Code. Initially, Chas-ka Investment (and two other of Debtors’ landlords) were omitted as creditors from the Chapter 12 petition. Rather, the Debtors’ schedules were prepared on an assumption that Chaska Investment (as well as the other two lessors) could be treated as secured creditors of Jeurissen Farms, Inc. (a name under which Jeurissens had been conducting some of their farming operations) and income from the 1986 crops could be viewed as assets, not of the Debtors, but of Jeurissen Farms, Inc., so as to protect the claimed security interests of these three landlords in the 1986 crop. This apparent attempt to forestall the claim of Production Credit Association (PCA) to a security interest in the 1986 crop, was apparently objected to at the first meeting of creditors, which was held on February 10, 1987.

Thereafter, when the Debtors filed their first Chapter 12 Plan of Reorganization on March 11, 1987, they listed Chaska Investment (along with the other two landlords and PCA) as secured creditors claiming a lien on the 1986 crop proceeds and indicated an intention to pay all four such creditors upon confirmation of the Plan following sale of the 1986 crop. Debtors’ First Amended Plan dated March 19, 1987, and their Second Amended Plan, dated April 27, 1987, altered the treatment of these four parties by deleting any reference to the three landlords, including Chas-ka Investment, as secured creditors, making clear that PCA claimed to be the sole secured party in the 1986 crop proceeds, and placing Chaska Investment and the other two lessors in a class of unsecured creditors who would be paid little or nothing pursuant to the Plan. From the beginning, the various Plans filed by the Debtors treated tjie 1986 lease as an expired lease and not as one which could be assumed under section 365 of the Bankruptcy Code.

On April 1,1987, Debtors’ counsel mailed a letter to Chaska Investment in which counsel notified Chaska Investment that it had been erroneously left off the original petition at the time of the filing and that by a copy of the letter to the bankruptcy court, Chaska Investment’s name would be added to the matrix. The bankruptcy court file reflects that Chaska Investment was thereafter (on April 3, 1987) placed on the matrix for service 2 and affidavits of service show that it received copies of materials not only relating to the confirmation of Debtors’ plan, but also papers relating to subsequent proceedings in which PCA successfully claimed to be the sole perfected secured creditor of the 1986 crop and a court order dated April 27, 1987, declaring PCA’s right as a secured creditor in that crop.

Chaska Investment claims that it did not have knowledge of the bankruptcy filing until it received the April 1,1987 letter and that, in any event, Ahlquist did not understand the implications of bankruptcy even at that point in time. Ahlquist testified that until some point in late spring Jeuris-sen kept assuring him that Chaska Investment would be paid the 1986 arrearages in spite of the bankruptcy. Jeurissen, however, testified that even before he filed his Chapter 12 he was in regular contact with Ahlquist on the subject; that Chaska Investment knew from the beginning of the filing; and that Chaska Investment was informed of Jeurissen’s original attempt to protect its interest in the 1986 crop and of the failure of that attempt in light of the objections of PCA.

The timing is important, Chaska Investment urges, because on March 20,1987, the parties entered into a new 1987 cropland lease (“the 1987 lease”) which carried essentially the same terms as the 1986 lease but to which Chaska Investment attached an “Addendum Agreement.” The Addendum Agreement was also dated March 20, 1987, and provides as follows:

In Consideration of Landlord signing the 1987 Cropland Lease before receiving *534 any outstanding rent from 1986, Tenant hereby agrees to pay the Landlord Eleven Thousand Four Hundred Seventy Four and 00/100 Dollars ($11,474.00) not later than March 81, 1987, which amount shall be applied to the 1986 rent, first to interest, then to the outstanding principal balance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 B.R. 531, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 525, 1988 WL 34681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jeurissen-mnb-1988.