In Re Neuhoff Farms, Inc.

258 B.R. 343, 44 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 397, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 1683, 2000 WL 33158561
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedApril 26, 2000
Docket16-02258
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 258 B.R. 343 (In Re Neuhoff Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Neuhoff Farms, Inc., 258 B.R. 343, 44 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 397, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 1683, 2000 WL 33158561 (N.C. 2000).

Opinion

ORDER

J. RICH LEONARD, Chief Judge.

This matter comes before the court on the creditor’s motion to direct the debtor to reject an executory contract, lift the automatic stay and pay an administrative expense. An extensive evidentiary hearing was held on March 15 and 16 and April 4, 2000, the first two dates in Wilson, North Carolina and the last date in New Bern, North Carolina. For the following reasons, the motion is denied.

Facts

Debtor filed a chapter 11 petition on October 1, 1999. Since that time, the debtor has operated under its executory contract with Hatfield Quality Meats, Inc. (“Hatfield”), originally executed on January 9,1995 and known by all parties as the “hog partnership agreement.” Under this agreement the debtor supplies Hatfield with approximately 200,000 market hogs per year. Subsequent to filing this motion on November 23, 1999, but before this hearing, Hatfield renewed the contract pursuant to the original agreement terms. By a letter dated December 23, 1999, Hatfield extended the agreement for an additional five year term upon expiration of the initial five year term on January 8, 2000. The hearing on this motion was originally set for December 7, 1999, but was continued to January 12, 2000 and finally March 15, 2000 upon oral motions by Hatfield. Thus, Hatfield is asking this court to force the rejection of an executory contract that it has renewed and extended during continuances it requested.

The underlying reason that Hatfield seeks to force the debtor to reject is the hypothetical deficit ledger amount accumulated under the agreement. Currently, as stated in this court’s order of February 24, 2000, 1 the deficit amount of over five (5) million dollars is a contingent liability that may never materialize into an actual claim. Essentially, as long as the debtor continues to perform under the terms of the agreement, Hatfield has no claim. 2 If the *346 debtor, though, must reject this executory contract because it is barred from assuming it pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §§ 365(c)(1) or (c)(2), then the debtor would be in breach and the deficit amount would transform into an actual cognizable claim against the bankruptcy estate.

Under the pertinent provisions of the hog partnership agreement, Hatfield purchases market hogs from the debtor within a window range of prices per pound. This is the “window ledger” feature. When market prices are lower than the “floor” of the window range, a portion of the amount that Hatfield pays to the debtor which is over and above the going market price is tracked in the deficit ledger account, also called the negative cash balance. 3 It is by way of this pricing mechanism that a deficit ledger of over five (5) million dollars has accumulated. Post-petition, the debt- or has continued to deliver and Hatfield has continued to purchase the market hogs under this agreement, contributing to a growing accumulation of the deficit amount due to the current state of the hog market. 4

In addition to the contractual relationship with the debtor, Hatfield purchases from numerous other hog producers. In fact, the debtor supplies Hatfield with approximately only ten percent (10%) of its hog requirements on an annualized basis, yet the debtor is Hatfield’s largest single supplier. Hatfield asserts that this agreement is important because it provides for flexibility in shipping and receiving. More pertinently, though, the agreement is a hedge on the fluctuating hog market. On the one hand, Hatfield gets a steady yet flexible flow of product from a reliable supplier, while the debtor is guaranteed to receive a price per pound within the window range, lessening the effect of market downturns and providing for steady growth. Conversely, in prosperous market times, Hatfield and the debtor split the amount that accumulates when the going market price is higher than the “ceiling” contract price. 5 In contrast to the deficit amount, neither Hatfield nor the debtor keeps track of the surplus, and this savings by Hatfield is not credited against later deficits.

A deficit or surplus, outside the range of the price window, may occur at any time, and Hatfield’s hope is that any accumulated deficit will be negated by the times of surplus. While the hog partnership agreement provides that the debtor is required to pay off the deficit if it chooses to end the contract prematurely, absent breach or repudiation of the contract, only increases in market hog prices will cut the deficit. Although Hatfield states that at the time of negotiating this agreement it viewed the “ledger deficit as a financed obligation that it intended to collect,” 6 this is not sup *347 ported by the plain language of the agreement. (Pre-trial Statement of Law at 6.)

Hatfield asserts two theories upon which this court should find that the hog partnership agreement is an executory contract that can neither be assigned nor assumed by the debtor. First, pursuant to § 365(c)(2) Hatfield argues that this agreement constitutes a contract to extend financial accommodations to the debtor, which cannot be assumed. Second, Hatfield posits that under § 365(c)(1) and alleged applicable nonbankruptcy law, § 2-210 of the Uniform Commercial Code (“UCC”), the debtor cannot assign the contract without the consent of Hatfield. Obviously Hatfield does not consent. Thus, as the debtor is barred from assigning or assuming the agreement, the court should enter an order directing the debtor to reject the agreement.

In conjunction with this forced rejection under either §§ 365(c)(1) or (2), Hatfield asserts that the automatic stay should be lifted “for cause” so that it may refuse hog shipments from the debtor. Last, it argues that the deficit accrued post-petition, at the rate of $50,000.00 per week, should be paid promptly to Hatfield upon the debtor’s forced rejection as an administrative claim under §§ 503(b) and 507(a)(1), in addition to the creation of a general unsecured pre-petition claim for an amount in excess of five (5) million dollars.

Analysis

Hatfield’s motion is brought under the authority of § 365(d)(2), which allows a party to an executory contract to request the court to order the debtor-in-possession to assume or reject it. This motion, though, only requests that the debtor-in-possession be forced to reject the hog partnership agreement, not that it alternatively be allowed to assume. During this hearing, testimony inevitably related to the intertwined analysis of whether the debtor-in-possession can assume was offered. Importantly, that is not the issue presently before the court and it is not disposed of in this order; assumption is a live issue, raised by the proposed assumption of this agreement in the proposed plan. Nonetheless, there is no legal basis upon which to conclude that the debtor is barred under the Bankruptcy Code and nonbankruptcy law from assuming this agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
258 B.R. 343, 44 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 397, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 1683, 2000 WL 33158561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-neuhoff-farms-inc-nceb-2000.