In Re Mullen

172 B.R. 473, 31 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1765, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 1545, 26 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 66, 1994 WL 531549
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 28, 1994
Docket19-10485
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 172 B.R. 473 (In Re Mullen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Mullen, 172 B.R. 473, 31 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1765, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 1545, 26 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 66, 1994 WL 531549 (Mass. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

JAMES F. QUEENAN, Jr., Chief Judge.

BayBank asserts it lacks adequate protection of its security interest in rents from four commercial properties included under its mortgages and rent assignments. It moves for an order requiring G. Burton Mullen (the “Debtor”) to turn over to it all “net rents” (after expenses). Alternatively, BayBank requests an order requiring the Debtor to “segregate” the monthly net rents, presumably through creation of an escrow account set aside for BayBank’s benefit.

The properties are being well maintained, and there is no suggestion they or the rental streams they generate are declining in value. Taxes and insurance are current. The question presented is whether BayBank’s adequate protection rights concerning rents should be considered separately or as part of the adequate protection of its security interest in the Debtor’s entire property interests, including the stream of future rents. I conclude the latter analysis is appropriate, and hold that BayBank’s security interest under its mortgages and rent assignments are adequately protected without the requested turnover or escrow of net rents. I therefore deny the motion. Alternatively, I deny the motion on the ground the requested turnover or escrow would bring about an increase in the value of BayBank’s security interests that is inconsistent with the “equities of the case” within the meaning of section 552(b) of the Bankruptcy Code.

BayBank holds notes with a total balance of about $3.5 million, secured by four commercial properties, one in Marlborough, Massachusetts and three in Sudbury, Massachusetts. The properties have an aggregate fair market value of about $2.84 million. The Debtor owns two outright. The other two are held by a partnership or nominee trust in which the Debtor owns a beneficial interest. BayBank holds a mortgage and rent assignment on each of the properties, all of which have been recorded.

Under the rent assignments, the borrowers assigned all “right, title and interest in and to the Rents.” The assignments state they “shall become operative, at the option of the Lender, upon any default by the Borrowers....” The assignments further authorize BayBank, after a default, to collect all unpaid rents then due and all rents thereafter accruing.

Payment defaults occurred under all the notes. BayBank gave the Debtor notice of the defaults, and it accelerated payment due under the notes, but did not take possession of the properties. Nor did it commence any foreclosure or court proceeding. The Debt- or’s chapter 11 filing followed on April 12, 1993. In March of 1994, BayBank sought relief from stay in order to foreclose under its mortgages. That motion was denied, without prejudice, due in part to the Debtor’s pending preference claims against BayBank concerning the mortgages, which will shortly *475 be tried. On August 1, 1994, BayBank filed the present motion.

In the pending preference action, the Debtor contends that documents which col-lateralized all the notes by all the mortgages effected preferential transfers. Without that cross-collateralization, the Debtor asserts, BayBank would be over-secured on some of the properties, so there would be a surplus available to the estate.

For purposes of the present motion, I assume the mortgages secure all the notes, resulting in BayBank being undersecured. That is the collateral position most favorable to BayBank’s adequate protection argument on the present motion.

Rents, like the cash proceeds of receivables or inventory, are cash collateral when included within a creditor’s security interest. 1 The Debtor may not use rents unless BayBank consents or the court authorizes the use. 2 The court may grant the authorization over BayBank’s objection only if BayBank has adequate protection. 3 Bay-Bank first objected to the Debtor’s use of rents when it filed the present motion in August of 1994, long after the Debtor’s chapter 11 filing on April 12, 1993. Although BayBank had filed a motion for relief from stay in March of 1994, it sought in that motion to foreclose its mortgage rather than to raise objections to the Debtor’s use of rents. I thus consider BayBank to have consented to the use of rents until it filed the present motion. I treat the Debtor’s objection to the motion as a request for use of rents over BayBank’s objection.

I. THE INDIVISIBLE NATURE OF BAYBANK’S ADEQUATE PROTECTION RIGHTS

BayBank devotes a considerable portion of its brief to the assertion that, absent the automatic stay, it has an enforceable right to collect rents, notwithstanding its lack of possession of the properties prior to the petition filing date. Its right to collect rents, Bay-Bank reasons, means the automatic stay against collection necessarily denies it adequate protection. The subject of BayBank’s rent collection rights is briefly treated in Part III of this opinion. I here assume that absent the automatic stay BayBank would have an immediate right to collect rents. That subject, however, is somewhat of a red herring, drawing attention away from adequate protection principles. The existence of a present right (outside bankruptcy) on the part of BayBank to collect rents does not mean denial of the exercise of the right constitutes denial of adequate protection.

In collecting rents, a creditor holding a rent assignment is obviously realizing upon its collateral. The collection of rents is therefore foreclosure of a security interest under another name. Assuming a debtor has reasonable prospects of reorganization, a creditor otherwise entitled to foreclose may not do so unless cause, including lack of adequate protection, exists to vacate or modify the automatic stay against foreclosure. 4

BayBank’s present motion, which is brought under section 363 rather than section 362, purports only to request an order restricting the Debtor’s use of cash collateral, rather than permission to foreclose. Even when the motion is so viewed, the issue presented is one of adequate protection. The Debtor may use BayBank’s cash collateral provided the use does not deprive Bay-Bank of adequate protection. 5

BayBank’s contention that it lacks adequate protection of its interest in rents incorrectly assumes that a mortgagee holding a rent assignment has adequate protection rights in the rents which are independent of its right to adequate protection of its security interest in the debtor’s entire interest in the property, including the debtor’s right to collect rents. BayBank’s contention also ignores the difference between a security interest in a stream of rents and realization upon that security interest. Understanding the *476 fallacy of BayBank’s argument requires, first, a brief review of adequate protection principles.

The Bankruptcy Code is consistent throughout in describing that which must be adequately protected as the creditor’s “interest in property.” 6

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Bluebook (online)
172 B.R. 473, 31 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1765, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 1545, 26 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 66, 1994 WL 531549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mullen-mab-1994.