In Re Lee

35 B.R. 663, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 4832, 11 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 337
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedDecember 16, 1983
Docket19-40310
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 35 B.R. 663 (In Re Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Lee, 35 B.R. 663, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 4832, 11 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 337 (Ohio 1983).

Opinion

FINDING AS TO EXEMPTION CLAIM

HAROLD F. WHITE, Bankruptcy Judge.

Warren Production Credit Association (hereinafter referred to as “WPCA”) filed an objection on July 6, 1983 to the claim of exemptions of the debtors in Payment-in-Kind (PIK) benefits. WPCA further requested this Court to determine that it holds a valid security interest in the PIK benefits.

An evidentiary hearing was held and briefs have been filed. The Court makes the following Finding of Fact and Law based upon the testimony of the witnesses and the exhibits submitted.

FINDING OF FACT

1. The debtors filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy on May 18, 1983 and are the operators of a hog farm known as the “Sandy Lee Farm” in Columbiana County, Ohio.

2. The real property on which the hog farm is operated is subject to three mortgages. They are: a first mortgage to Federal Land Bank of Louisville on which approximately $90,603.95 is owed; a second mortgage to United States of America, Farmers Home Administration on which the sum of $129,887.34 is owed; and a third mortgage to Warren Production Credit Association on which the sum of $152,703.46 is owed. The third mortgage is further secured by miscellaneous farm equipment, the pig herd, and all growing crops and harvested corn and livestock feed.

3. On February 8, 1983, debtor, George E. Lee, Jr., executed a contract with the Columbiana Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service (hereinafter referred to as “CCC”) on behalf of the Commodity Credit Corporation to participate in the 1983 Payment-In-Kind (PIK) Diversion Program. (Plaintiff’s Exhibits E and F). In said contract debtor agreed that he would not plant any corn on his land during the crop year 1983. As consideration therefor, the CCC agreed to compensate debtor through Payment-In-Kind according to the formula set forth in the contract and further through some small cash payments. Said contract was officially approved by the CCC on March 18, 1983.

4. The contract consists of a page entitled “Contract to Participate In the 1983 Payment-In-Kind Diversion (PIK) Program”, and Appendix to said Contract and an Addendum to the Appendix. A copy of the single page entitled contract was hand-delivered to debtor, George E. Lee, Jr., at the time that said debtor executed the contract on February 8, 1983. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit F). The Appendix and Addendum to Appendix were delivered to debtor via the U.S. Ppstal Service following the approval of the contract on March 16, 1983 by the CCC. The Addendum to the Appendix indi *665 cates on page 2 that a copy of it was sent to debtor in the mail on that date. (Plaintiff’s Exhibits G and H).

5. In order to comply with the terms of the contract and the federal regulations governing the same, debtors were required to plant a cover crop on the acreage governed by the PIK program. Debtors planted timothy grass as a cover crop in late May — early June 1983. Debtor, George E. Lee, planted the grass with a hand seeder over a four-day period, twelve hours each day. Debtors spent $210.00 to purchase the seed.

6. In order to further comply with the contract and federal regulations, debtor, George Lee, Jr., mowed the grass over a four-day period in early July, 1983.

7. The PIK program also provided for diversion payments. The sum of $559.50 was paid to debtors on or about April 29, 1983. A second payment in an unknown amount was due to be paid after September 1, 1983.

8. Paul Good, Executive Director for the Agricultural Stabilization Conservation Service in Columbiana County, testified that withdrawal from the PIK program after March 18, 1983, the date that debtors’ bid for the PIK program was accepted, would have resulted in an assessment of liquidated damages against debtors.

9. The debtors’ benefit in PIK would be about 4,000 bushels of corn with a market value of approximately $13,560.00, less the diversion payment of $559.80 made in April 1983.

ISSUES

The issues presented herein are: 1) whether the PIK diversion benefits are property of the estate and 2) if so, whether WPCA’s security interest attaches to the same.

LAW

It is debtors’ argument that the contract which it executed on February 8, 1983 was subject to several conditions precedent, none of which had occurred prior to the filing of the petition herein. As such, debtors argue, they had no rights under the contract until these conditions had been met. Accordingly, the right to receive PIK benefits could not become property of the estate pursuant to 11 U.S.C. section 541(a). The obligations which debtors argue were conditions precedent were their duty to refrain from planting corn in 1983 and their duty to plant a cover crop on the acreage governed by the PIK contract. It should be noted that both of these obligations have been satisfied by debtors, post-petition.

Arthur Corbin in his treatise on contract law states that conditions precedent are “those facts and events occurring subsequently to the making of a valid contract that must exist or occur before there is a right to immediate performance, before there is a breach of contract duty, before the usual judicial remedies are available.” 3A A. Corbin, A Comprehensive Treatise on the Rules of Contract Law, section 628 (Rev. ed. 1960). It has been stated further that “a condition precedent is distinguished from a promise in that it creates no right or duty in and of itself but is merely a limiting or modifying factor”. S. Williston, A Treatise on the Law of Contracts, section 663 (3d ed. 1961). In order to be a condition precedent rather than a promise, the parties must have so intended. Mumaw v. The Western & Southern Life Insurance Co., 97 Ohio St. 1, 119 N.E. 132 (1917).

In the instant case, debtors agreed to forego their right to plant corn on their farm land in 1983 and agreed instead to plant an erosion preventative crop. As consideration for these promises, debtors were to receive corn in an amount based upon a percentage of the debtors’ production in previous years and were further to receive cash payments. Under the terms of the contract, a failure on the part of the debtors to carry out any of the terms of the contract, including the obligations not to plant corn, could result in the assessment of liquidated damages against debtors. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit G at paragraph 14).

*666 The Court finds that the contract before it was no more than a simple contract with benefits and obligations flowing to both sides, one of which obligations was debtors’ duty to forego planting corn and to maintain a soil conserving crop. In re Hamilton, 18 B.R. 868 (Bkrtcy.D.Co.1982) at 872. To hold otherwise would be to grant debtors the ability to change their decision not to plant corn anytime up until the latest possible time when corn may feasibly be planted in Columbiana County, Ohio. Construing these obligations as conditions precedent would allow debtors to determine as late as June 1 of a particular year that due to more favorable market conditions they would plant corn.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 B.R. 663, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 4832, 11 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lee-ohnb-1983.