In Re Moore & White Co., Inc.

83 B.R. 277, 1988 WL 14088
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 2, 1988
Docket19-11404
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 83 B.R. 277 (In Re Moore & White Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Moore & White Co., Inc., 83 B.R. 277, 1988 WL 14088 (Pa. 1988).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

BRUCE I. FOX, Bankruptcy Judge.

Loyola Paper Company, (Loyola), has filed a motion for relief from the automatic stay alleging that the debtor currently possesses a paper cutting machine belonging to Loyola and requesting that this court order the debtor to turnover the property. Both the debtor and the official committee of unsecured creditors oppose this motion. They argue that the debtor has possession of the machine pursuant to an executory contract and is entitled to retain possession until that executory contract is rejected in accordance with 11 U.S.C. § 365(a).

I.

After hearing testimony on the matter, I make the following factual findings:

1. On May 30, 1986, the debtor and Loyola entered into a written agreement by which the debtor agreed to construct and Loyola agreed to purchase a PRD Double Rotary Knife Sheeting System for a total purchase price of $675,000.00.

2. This agreement, admitted in evidence as L-l, set forth the following payment terms:

$168,500.00 Down Payment
150,000.00 Mid Term
53,500.00 Upon Shipment
65,000.00 30 Days after Installation
238,000.00 Payable monthly over a three year term at 57< interest according to the attached note payable document and payment schedule.
$675,000.00 TOTAL

3. On or about the time the agreement was reached, Loyola paid $168,500.00 to the debtor, representing the down payment.

4. The agreement called for the machine to be completed and shipped to Loyola within 22 to 25 weeks. (L-l, at 30). However, on January 30, 1987, the debtor wrote to Loyola explaining that completion of the machine had been delayed. Completion was estimated for early May, 1987 and delivery, after testing, would be made by mid-May, 1987. (L-2).

5. After receiving the letter, Loyola then paid $150,000.00 to the debtor which represented the requisite mid-term payment and which was requested by the debt- or in its letter.

6. By June, 1987, the machine was still not fully constructed. In a letter dated June 23, 1987, (L-7), the debtor proposed an amendment to the contract of May 30, 1986. Under this proposal, the payment timetable was to be altered. Instead of next paying the debtor upon shipment of the completed machine, the debtor requested that Loyola pay the balance due on the original contract, $356,500.00, as follows:

*279 Payment terms for the machine will be revised as follows:
Due now $100,000.00
Due as expended by Moore & White on
Loyola materials and labor, up to $150,000.00
Due upon factory acceptance test, up to $ 72,750.00
Due thirty (30) days after installation $ 33,750.00
Total $356,500.00

7. While the debtor testified, through its chief executive officer, that Loyola orally agreed to this revised payment schedule, Loyola, through its vice-president, testified otherwise.

8. The evidence supports Loyola’s position that it rejected debtor’s request to modify the May, 1986 contract. At no time did Loyola make any payments pursuant to the revised schedule; indeed, the debtor did not offer any evidence that such payments were demanded. Furthermore, on July 16, 1987, the parties signed a bill of sale.

9. The bill of sale, dated July 16, 1987 and admitted into evidence as L-3, states that the debtor, upon signing, transfers title to the partially completed machine to Loyola and gives Loyola a right to immediate possession. In return, Loyola is obligated to pay $54,816.01 to Meridian Bank on the debtor’s behalf. The bill of sale has attached the May 30, 1986 agreement, (L-1), but neither mentions nor attaches the June 23, 1987 letter, (L-7).

10. Shortly after signing the agreement, Loyola paid $54,816.01 to Meridian Bank.

11. Although the debtor argues that it is implausible to conclude that it would transfer ownership and possession of the machine to Loyola (and release it from the obligation imposed by the $238,000.00 note, see finding #2) in return for total payments of $373,316.01 ($168,500.00 + $150,-000.00 + $54,816.01), this argument assumes that the value of the machine, as of July 16, 1987 far exceeded $373,316.01. 1 The debtor offered no evidence as to the value of the machine, which was unfinished and uninstalled as of the date of the bill of sale.

12. Although Loyola had the right to take possession of the machine, as of July 16, 1987, it left the machine at the debtor’s premises through the date of the debtor’s bankruptcy filing. The machine was clearly marked as the property of Loyola while in the debtor’s possession; however, Loyola never demanded possession from the debtor until after the instant bankruptcy case was commenced.

13. Loyola maintains that it left the machine in debtor’s possession because: its vice-president was vacationing after July 16, 1987; it is a heavy machine to transport; and, it was searching for another company able and willing to complete construction. These explanations do not fully justify leaving the machine in the debtor’s possession for many months.

14. After July 16, 1987, the debtor sent Loyola a list of parts needed to complete construction of the machine. Initially these parts were estimated to cost approximately $160,000.00. Subsequently, the list was amended to reflect total cost of roughly $186,000.00. Some additional labor expenses were estimated at approximately $22,000.00.

15. After July 16, 1987, Loyola arranged for some of those parts to be shipped from suppliers to the debtor. Not all necessary parts were either ordered or shipped. Loyola paid for these parts directly by payments to the suppliers.

16. In September 1987, the debtor provided Loyola with a status report concerning the machine in question. This report estimated that the machine could be fully assembled, tested and shipped to Loyola by December 4, 1987. This estimate was not met. However, upon receipt of this status report, Loyola never stated that the debtor should cease all work on the machine.

17. The debtor’s staff has been reduced from thirty-two employees prepetition to six employees postpetition. Were the debt- or to complete the machine, it would need to hire additional employees or subcontract some necessary work.

*280 18. Were the debtor to complete the machine, total payments received would be less than the total cost to the debtor of designing, building, testing and installing the machine. (See L-7).

19. The debtor believes that its losses would be reduced if it were to complete the machine rather than stop at this point in construction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 B.R. 277, 1988 WL 14088, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-moore-white-co-inc-paeb-1988.