In Re Mesa Business Park Partnership

127 B.R. 144, 5 Tex.Bankr.Ct.Rep. 257, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 643, 1991 WL 74703
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedMarch 6, 1991
Docket15-31921
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 127 B.R. 144 (In Re Mesa Business Park Partnership) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Mesa Business Park Partnership, 127 B.R. 144, 5 Tex.Bankr.Ct.Rep. 257, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 643, 1991 WL 74703 (Tex. 1991).

Opinion

DECISION ON DEBTOR’S MOTION FOR VALUATION AND CREDITOR’S MOTION TO ANNUL OR MODIFY STAY

LEIF M. CLARK, Bankruptcy Judge.

CAME ON for hearing the motion of Debtor for Valuation, and the motion of creditor to Annul or Modify Stay. Upon consideration of these motions, the court enters this memorandum of decision thereon.

After efforts to negotiate a compromise of Mesa Business Park Partnership’s first lien indebtedness on its sole_asset (a piece of property improved with a business park development), the partnership and its partners faced foreclosure by the first lien lender, Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company (“Fidelity”). The partners, of *146 course, feared that the foreclosure would yield a value far short of the true value of the collateral, resulting in a larger deficiency claim against them. The general partners had also signed absolute guaranties which, under Texas law, are enforceable regardless whether the lender resorts to the collateral, and are not contingent upon the lender’s first pursuing the primary obligor. Goff v. Southmost Sav. & Loan Ass’n, 758 S.W.2d 822, 824 (Tex.App.-Corpus Christi 1988, writ den.); see generally Houston Sash & Door Co., Inc. v. Heaner, 577 S.W.2d 217 (Tex.1979); Universal Metals & Machinery, Inc. v. Bohart, 539 S.W.2d 874 (Tex.1976) (absolute guarantors are primarily liable independent of the liability of the primary obligor). 1

Faced with these prospects, the guarantor partners caused the partnership to file bankruptcy, bare hours before the scheduled foreclosure. The lender, however, did not know of the filing and proceeded with the foreclosure. The lender had had the property appraised the week before for $1.45 million. At the foreclosure sale, the lender made a credit bid of $1.15 million, approximately 70% of the appraised fair value. Evidently, no one else bid on the property (including the partnership, its partners, or the second lienholder, Southwestern Federal Savings Bank).

Not long after the bankruptcy filing, the debtor partnership filed a motion for valuation of the property, relying on Section 506(a), the Fifth Circuit’s decision in Sandy Ridge Development, and this court’s ruling in Saunders. See 11 U.S.C. § 506(a); In re Sandy Ridge Development, Inc., 881 F.2d 1346 (5th Cir.1989); In re Saunders, 112 B.R. 844 (Bankr.W.D.Tex.1990). Fidelity responded by seeking an annulment of the automatic stay, so that the foreclosure sale would then be validated after the fact. 2

Fidelity strongly urges that the valuation brought by the debtor serves no purpose, especially if the stay is annulled. An annulment would mean that the property ceased to be property of the estate effective the date of the foreclosure sale in December, rendering a valuation hearing moot. See In re Saunders, 112 B.R. at 846. Even without an annulment, the lender argues that valuation is inappropriate. Such a valuation would serve no bankruptcy purpose because the debtor does not intend to keep the property, and has nothing else to reorganize. 3 The lender points out that the real motivation for the valuation is to benefit the guarantor partners, who hope the valuation finding would set the deficiency claim the lender would assert against them, superseding the deficiency that would otherwise be determined by the price paid for the property at the foreclosure sale.

The debtor counters that it is merely seeking to employ a device statutorily granted any debtor in bankruptcy by Section 506(a). It adds that, but for that provision, both the debtor and its guarantor partners would be deprived as a practical matter of any forum in which to assure that they are properly credited with the true value of the property. They point out that, under Texas case law, a lender is allowed to bid in virtually any price it wants at a foreclosure sale, even one far less than the actual value of the collateral, leaving the lender to, in effect, unilaterally *147 set the deficiency claim against both debtor and guarantors, without any controls to protect them against artificially inflated deficiency claims. The debtor notes that, in this case for example, the lender bid $300,-000 less than the market value as determined by an appraisal commissioned by the lender itself, confirming the injustice of the state law system for setting deficiencies. 4 Bankruptcy gives the debtor an alternative forum within which to rectify this perceived injustice, and principles of collateral estoppel permit the guarantor partners to benefit from the bankruptcy determination of value, according to the debtor. 5 These partners are parties in interest and their interests, argues the debtor, are a proper consideration for the bankruptcy court presiding over the partnership’s bankruptcy. 6

The debtor has acknowledged that it does not oppose the property’s going back to the lender, so long as it can first obtain a valuation. It opposes an annulment of the stay because it might render the valuation moot. See In re Saunders, 112 B.R. at 846.

The single question before the court is this. May a debtor obtain a valuation of property for the sake of valuation alone? The debtor acknowledges_there is nonequity in the property-T-so-valnation is not required for that purposed. 7 Gleariyrrro-reergamzation purpose for_the valuation was contem-platedr-because_thfi_debtpr's_jonly source of income with jwhich to fund a plan is the very .property. which Js_yaSntarily~going back-fay the lender. The debtor gave ño indication of any other purpose for the valuation, other than to set the deficiency claim for the benefit of the guarantor partners.

At least two courts presented with this issue have concludedtiiat in these circumstances valuation is^iot)appropriate. In re Richardson, 97 B.R. 161, 162 (Bankr.W.D.N.Y.1989); accord, In re Turnbow, 121 B.R. 11, 13 (Bankr.S.D.Tex.1990). These courts observe that a Section 506(a) valuation requires some context in order for the procedure to be invoked, and that the lack of such a bankruptcy related context would deprive the bankruptcy court of the jurisdiction to even make what would be essentially an advisory decision. In re Turnbow, 121 B.R. at 13, citing In re Richardson, supra and North Carolina v. Rice, 404 U.S. 244, 246, 92 S.Ct. 402, 404, 30 L.Ed.2d 413 (1971).

This court, in Saunders,

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Bluebook (online)
127 B.R. 144, 5 Tex.Bankr.Ct.Rep. 257, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 643, 1991 WL 74703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mesa-business-park-partnership-txwb-1991.