In Re Piper's Alley Co.

69 B.R. 382, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 387
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 15, 1987
Docket86 C 9008
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 69 B.R. 382 (In Re Piper's Alley Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Piper's Alley Co., 69 B.R. 382, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 387 (N.D. Ill. 1987).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

SHADUR, District Judge.

Debtor Piper's Alley Co. (“Piper’s Alley”) and contract purchaser Wells Street Inves *383 tors, Inc. (“Investors”) appeal from the decision by Bankruptcy Judge Robert Ginsburg (his September 30, 1986 Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Order [collectively the “Order”], formalizing his oral findings, conclusions and order of September 27 [cited “Tr. — ”]) refusing to reinstate the automatic stay or otherwise enjoin the Sheriffs sale of the real estate (the “Property”) that initially formed Piper’s Alley’s entire bankruptcy estate. For the reasons stated in this memorandum opinion and order, Bankruptcy Judge Ginsburg’s decision is affirmed.

Facts 1

In May 1986 the mortgage owned by Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company (“Mutual Benefit”) on the Property was in default in a number of major respects. Mutual Benefit obtained a judgment of foreclosure May 14, and the Sheriff’s sale was set for noon June 19.

Piper’s Alley signed a Real Estate Sales Contract (the “Contract”) with Investors at the eleventh hour (both literally and figuratively) — just one hour before the scheduled Sheriff’s sale. Piper’s Alley immediately filed Chapter 11 proceedings, thus obtaining an automatic stay of the sale. But by its very terms the Contract was unconditional, subject neither to financing nor to the satisfaction of Mutual Benefit’s mortgage: Investors (a shell corporation) took the risks of foreclosure of that mortgage. And the Contract set a closing date of September 22, something over three months after the date on which it was signed.

Piper’s Alley and Investors somewhat inexplicably conducted an attempted early “closing” under the Contract at the beginning of August, by Investors’ paying Piper’s Alley substantially all the remaining equity over the mortgage (it will be recalled Investors had contracted to take the Property cum onere, subject to Mutual Benefit’s rights). When Mutual Benefit learned of the putative closing, it immediately brought the matter before the Bankruptcy Court. Judge Ginsburg found Piper’s Alley had violated its fiduciary duties by the attempted closing, and he ordered the deeds and Investors’ payments to be escrowed with Piper’s Alley’s attorneys.

At an August 13 hearing, conducted to consider Mutual Benefit’s motion to lift the automatic stay because of the attempted “closing” and for other reasons, Investors’ principal Philip Farley testified as to his awareness of the risks in the transaction, including:

1. the risk of loss of Investors’ investment if Mutual Benefit’s mortgage were not paid in full by the September 22 closing date under the Contract; and
2. Piper’s Alley’s right to perform the Contract simply by delivering marketable title to the Property with the Bankruptcy Court’s approval, whether or not the mortgagee was paid.

At the conclusion of the hearing Judge Ginsburg entered an order lifting the automatic stay as of September 23, one day after the scheduled Contract closing date. That was not only the time period selected by the parties themselves two months earlier, but it also allowed ample time for performance at the Closing. It gave ample protection to Piper’s Alley as debtor. It should be noted that by executing the Contract, Piper’s Alley had really converted its bankruptcy estate into the equity provided by the Contract and not the Property itself, which had been the subject of unsuccessful sale efforts on the part of Piper’s Alley for some two years before the Chapter 11 filing.

Nevertheless, immediately before the scheduled closing date Piper’s Alley and Investors sought to amend the Contract to extend the closing to the end of January 1987. They then petitioned for an indefi *384 nite-period reinstatement of the stay. Following an emergency hearing on Saturday, September 27, Judge Ginsburg denied the motion to enjoin the foreclosure sale. To permit an appeal, Judge Ginsburg stayed the sale upon the condition that Investors promptly post $1 million in security. Investors timely posted such security in the form of a bank letter of credit.

So much, then, for the factual backdrop for the current appeal. This opinion turns to the grounds advanced by Piper’s Alley and Investors for reversing Judge Ginsburg.

Findings and Conclusions

Piper’s Alley and Investors do not get off to an auspicious start. They claim Judge Ginsburg’s order was in error simply because it included this statement:

3. All findings of fact herein that are deemed to be conclusions of law shall be additional conclusions of law, and all conclusions of law contained herein that are deemed to be findings of fact shall be additional findings of fact. 2

That, they claim, “puts an untenable burden upon the reviewing court” (Appellants’ Br. 12).

True enough, “[findings of fact] are subject to the ‘clearly erroneous' standard, while [conclusions of law] are subject to independent de novo review” (id.). It is necessarily then the responsibility of the lower court to distinguish between the two categories to facilitate review. But one of the first things all of us learn in law school is that no bright line separates “fact” from “law” — a matter confirmed by the difficulties courts have in wrestling with such categorization (and perhaps as well by the familiar phrase “mixed questions of law and fact”). Casebooks are filled with decisions in which appellate courts have differed from trial courts — or higher appellate courts have differed from lower appellate courts — as to which of those two rubrics a particular matter falls under.

Judge Ginsburg is therefore understandably (and properly) cautious in this area. Indeed, he is not alone in his practice of specifically attaching “findings of fact” and “conclusions of law” labels to the different sections of his own determinations, but then adding the kind of precautionary statement quoted above — just to hedge the possibility a reviewing court might disagree as to the proper characterization of one individual item or another. This Court does exactly the same in the course of its most careful and detailed findings and conclusions (see, e.g., last week’s advance sheet reporting of Williams v. Lane, 646 F.Supp. 1379, 1380 n. 1 (N.D.Ill.1986)).

In all candor, the Piper’s Alley-Investors position must be viewed as near-frivolous. This case does not at all resemble the situation posed by In re X-Cel, Inc., 776 F.2d 130, 133-34 (7th Cir.1985), in which the Bankruptcy Court had adopted in toto the submission by counsel for one of the parties as the Court’s own purported findings and conclusions. There counsel’s submission was impermissibly made in narrative form and contained a mixed bag, with each of the submission’s two sections “containing] factual statements” and with one of those sections “also including] invectives that would be highly objectionable in a judicial opinion” (id. at 134).

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69 B.R. 382, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-pipers-alley-co-ilnd-1987.