In Re Painter

39 B.R. 544, 38 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1381, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 5735
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. South Dakota
DecidedMay 7, 1984
Docket19-40096
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 39 B.R. 544 (In Re Painter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. South Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Painter, 39 B.R. 544, 38 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1381, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 5735 (S.D. 1984).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

PEDER K. ECKER, Bankruptcy Judge.

The above-entitled matter is before the Court on the debtors’ motion for determination of secured status. Although this action is more accurately described as one requesting the Court to determine the validity, priority, and extent of liens (an adversary proceeding commenced by filing a complaint rather than a motion), the Court will consider the matter as properly before it because the McCook County National Bank (bank) has not objected. See Bankr. R.P. 7001(2), 7003.

The relevant facts are not in dispute. The bank filed a financing statement with the McCook County Register of Deeds on January 20, 1978,- thereby perfecting a security interest in the following assets of the debtors: “All equipment, all farm products including but not limited to crops, livestock, supplies used or produced in farming operations, contract rights and accounts,” and the proceeds and products thereof. The bank filed a continuation statement with the McCook County Register of Deeds on February 11, 1983.

The debtors contend that the bank’s security interest is only perfected in the debtors’ farm equipment and not in the other types of collateral described in the 1978 financing statement and the 1983 continuation statement. The crux of the debtors’ argument relies on S.D.C.L. § 57A-9-401(1) (1980), the “filing” statute in effect when the bank filed its continuation statement with the Register of Deeds on February 11, 1983:

(1) The proper place to file in order to perfect a security interest is as follows:
(a) When the collateral is equipment used in farming operations or consumer goods, is in the office of the register of deeds in the county of the debtor’s residence or if the debtor is not a resident of this state then in the office of the register of deeds in the county where the goods are kept;
(b) When the collateral is goods which at the time the security interest attaches are or are to become fixtures, is in the office where a mortgage on the real estate concerned would be filed or recorded;
(c) In all other cases, in the office of the secretary of state.

Subsection 57A-9-401(1), as quoted above, clearly requires that a security interest in all of the collateral described in the bank’s financing and continuation statements, except farm equipment, be perfected by filing a financing statement with the Secretary of State. The debtors argue that the bank is unperfected in collateral other than farm *546 equipment because the bank cannot file a continuation statement when then-current law required original perfection with the Secretary of State.

The bank, however, while conceding that a new financing statement would have had to have been filed with the Secretary of State, insists that the issue is whether a continuation statement should have been filed with the Secretary of State (a central filing) or with the Register of Deeds (a local filing). In support of its position, the bank cites In re Barnes, 15 U.C.C.Rep. Serv. (Callaghan) 956 (D.Me.1974). In Barnes, a creditor properly perfected a security interest in a farm tractor under the laws of the State of Maine by filing a financing statement locally. Subsequent to the filing of the original financing statement, Maine’s version of U.C.C. § 9-401 was amended to require central filing for farm equipment. Prior to the lapse of its original filing, the creditor with the perfected security interest in the tractor centrally filed a continuation statement, which the Court later determined was sufficient to constitute a continuation statement and a financing statement.

The trustee in bankruptcy challenged the creditor’s central filing, insisting that the creditor should have filed locally, the place of the original filing, in spite of the fact that the current law required financing statements to be filed centrally, not locally. Eventually, the Barnes Court concludes that the creditor is unperfected and states: “[I]t must be held that §§ 9-401(1) and 9-403(3) require the filing of a continuation statement wherever the original financing statement whose effectiveness is sought to be extended was to have been filed, as determined on the basis of the circumstances, including the applicable law, prevailing at the time the security interest attached.” Barnes, supra at 964. The Court explained that because the law in effect at the time the original security interest attached required a local filing for farm equipment, a continuation statement covering that collateral had to be filed locally, in spite of the fact that current law enacted in the interim mandated that financing statements covering farm equipment must be filed centrally for proper perfection.

The bank is correct in its conclusion that the factual situation presented in Barnes is closely analogous to the instant case. A security interest was properly perfected. During the period of perfection, amendments to state versions of U.C.C. § 9-401 were enacted, changing the proper place to file a financing statement from a local to a central filing. The affected creditor in Barnes, however, filed a continuation and financing statement centrally as required by the new law, while the instant bank filed a continuation statement locally, the filing location mandated when its underlying security agreement attached. The creditor in Barnes was determined to be unperfected. It might seem logical that because the instant bank did the opposite from the creditor in Barnes, that it must be perfected. Although superficially appealing, this is not necessarily the correct legal conclusion.

Indeed, if one analyzes the facts of Barnes and the instant case to a transition between the so-called 1962 version of Article 9 and the 1972 version, the opposite result is reached. For example, if prior law requires a local filing for perfection but current law requires a central filing, any filing that must be renewed after the effective date of the new law cannot be perfected by filing a continuation statement, but can only be perfected by a central filing of a completely new financing statement. The legal authority supporting this example may be found in the Article 9 transition provisions of S.D.C.L. chapter 57A-11 and the related Uniform Commercial Code’s drafters’ discussion of the official text. See S.D.C.L. § 57A-11-105(3) (Supp.1983); U.C.C. app. I, § 11-105 discussion (1977); Comment, South Dakota’s Article Nine: A Time for Change, S.D.L.Rev. 413, 434-35 (1983). 1

*547 The Court is fully aware that the transition provisions of S.D.C.L. chapter 57A-11 or similar transition provisions were not applicable or enacted under the facts of Barnes or the instant case. But there can be no doubt that had the bank been in a situation of filing a timely continuation statement subsequent to 12:01 a.m., July 1, 1983, they would have been unperfected when their original local filing lapsed. See S.D.C.L. § 57A-11-101 (Supp.1983).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 B.R. 544, 38 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1381, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 5735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-painter-sdb-1984.