In RE McBRIDE

348 B.R. 539, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 2514, 2004 WL 4960522
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Idaho
DecidedDecember 22, 2004
Docket19-20147
StatusPublished

This text of 348 B.R. 539 (In RE McBRIDE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Idaho primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In RE McBRIDE, 348 B.R. 539, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 2514, 2004 WL 4960522 (Idaho 2004).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

JIM D. PAPPAS, Bankruptcy Judge.

While the old song suggests that discouraging words are seldom heard on the range, the Court in this case must resolve a dispute between cattle ranchers.

Debtor Timothy McBride sought relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code to reorganize his livestock operation. Creditors Charles and Helen Holtz filed a proof of claim in his bankruptcy case claiming amounts due as a result of Debt- or’s breach of a cattle lease. Debtor objected to the amount of Creditors’ claim. At issue is whether Debtor may offset amounts he asserts Creditors owe him against Creditors’ claim. After consider *541 ing the evidence, testimony, and arguments of the parties submitted at an evi-dentiary hearing concerning this contest, the Court concludes Debtor is not entitled to an offset. 1

Facts

In December 1998, Debtor and Creditors signed a cattle lease, the term of which extended from December 1, 1998 to November 30, 2001. Ex. 1. In general, Creditors agreed to provide Debtor with breeding stock and bulls. Debtor promised to care for the herd. For his efforts, Debtor could keep the offspring, but he had to pay Creditors an annual payment of $3,350 at the beginning of each year, plus the difference between that amount and $67 for each cow leased at the end of each season. The parties seemed satisfied with them arrangement and Debtor’s performance, because when the term of the lease neared an end, they orally agreed to extend the deal through November 2003.

The problems began in December 2002, when Debtor failed to make the $3,350 payment due for the 2003 season on time. Instead, at some point in January 2003, Debtor gave Creditors a check, but it “bounced.” Creditors were offended by this development, and so in early February 2003, Creditors sent Debtor written notice that they had decided to terminate the lease because Debtor had not timely paid them. Creditors demanded that Debtor return their cattle.

Before Debtor returned the animals, hopefully to salvage the deal, Debtor instructed his attorney to send a letter to Creditors’ counsel, suggesting some alternatives to terminating the lease. Ex. 6. Debtor made three proposals to Creditors in this February 13 letter: he offered to purchase the leased cattle; he proposed to make the late $3,350 payment and continue their original arrangement for the remainder of the season; or, if they insisted, Debtor indicated he would return the cattle to Creditors, but only if they paid him $21,240 to satisfy a lien he claimed in the cattle under Oregon law for his costs to care for the animals from December 1, 2002, through February Í5, 2003. The letter itemized Debtor’s expenses for pasture for 169 cows, hay for eighty cows, feed for six bulls, protein supplements for all of the animals, vaccinations for all of the animals, and labor for vaccinating the cattle. Debtor testified at the hearing that the vaccinations were done after the lease was renewed for 2003, but prior to Creditors sending him the notice of termination. According to Debtor, no new offspring were born during this time.

It appears Creditors at one point agreed to pay the lien Debtor asserted in order to get their cattle back, but the parties reserved their rights to assert any claims, counterclaims, and defenses against each other. See Ex. 2 (letter from Creditors’ counsel to Debtor’s counsel dated February 24, 2003). But, as it turned out, Creditors paid no amounts to Debtor, even though Debtor began to return the cattle to them. Debtor was unable to assemble and return all of the cattle immediately because the herd had been let out to graze over a large area. Ultimately, by March, Debtor had managed to locate 193 of the 249 cows that he had leased from Creditors, and he returned them in groups of approximately thirty cows on several different occasions. A brand inspector certified that 186 were returned, and Debtor testified that he returned another seven without the aid of a brand inspector. Of these seven, one cow died the day after it was returned. At the hearing, the parties *542 agreed that fifty-seven cows were never found and returned, 2 but despite Debtor’s speculation concerning what happened to them, no persuasive explanation was presented as to when or how these cattle went missing, or their whereabouts.

Debtor filed his Chapter 11 petition on May 14, 2003. Docket No. 1. On September 9, 2003, Creditors filed a proof of claim for $50,400, based on the value of the leased cows Debtor failed to return. Debtor filed an objection to the proof of claim on September 1, 2003, Docket No. 106, in which he contests the number of missing cows and their value, and in which he asserts a right to an offset of $23,092.27 against Creditors’ claim. 3 Creditors filed a response to Debtor’s objection on September 8, 2003. 4 Docket No. 109. As mentioned above, the Court conducted an evidentiary hearing concerning Debtor’s objection on November 23, 2003. After the evidence and testimony was submitted, the Court invited the parties to submit post-hearing briefs; both parties did so. Docket Nos. 130,131.

At the hearing, several issues were resolved. Counsel for the parties agreed there were fifty-seven missing cows; that each cow should be worth $800; and that the amount of Creditors’ claim would be $45,600 before any offset. In addition, Debtor admitted that he decided to vaccinate and care for the cattle in the manner that he did and that he was not acting at Creditors’ direction. Finally, Debtor acknowledged that he had breached the parties’ lease agreement; that his breach was sufficient cause for Creditors to terminate the lease; and that his claimed offset of $23,092.27 should be reduced by the $3,350 he failed to pay Creditors for the 2003 lease year, resulting in a total offset of $19,742.27. Only two significant issues remain for the Court’s consideration: whether Debtor is entitled to an offset against Creditors’ claim for his costs in caring for the leased cattle from December 1, 2002, to February 22, 2003; and, if so, the amount of the offset. Debtor contends that both the Oregon statutes and the equitable theory of unjust enrichment justify an offset. Creditors disagree. 5

Discussion

A. Debtor may not recover from Creditors under Or.Rev.Stat. § 87.152 (2004).

To support his claim that he is entitled to reimbursement from Creditors for the care he provided to the leased cattle, Debt- or first points to Or.Rev.Stat. § 87.152. That law provides:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
348 B.R. 539, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 2514, 2004 WL 4960522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mcbride-idb-2004.