In Re Rachels Industries, Inc.

109 B.R. 797, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 108, 1990 WL 5039
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 24, 1990
Docket19-21710
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 109 B.R. 797 (In Re Rachels Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Rachels Industries, Inc., 109 B.R. 797, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 108, 1990 WL 5039 (Tenn. 1990).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER ON DEBTOR’S MOTION TO ASSUME LEASE

WILLIAM H. BROWN, Bankruptcy Judge.

In this Chapter 11 case, most of the assets of the debtor have been liquidated by prior sales. However, the debtor asserts that it wishes to reorganize by leasing certain real property known as the former International Harvester facility (hereinafter “Harvester”), and pursuant to that goal, the debtor filed a motion to assume its lease of the Harvester facility. The facility is owned by the City of Memphis, Tennessee (hereinafter the “City”), and the City has objected to the debtor’s assumption of the lease on various grounds. After continuances requested by the parties, hearings began on the lease assumption and related issues on September 18, 1989. The parties have now filed post-hearing memoranda and the Court has reviewed the numerous exhibits, memoranda and all related materials. The following memorandum opinion constitutes findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 7052.

ISSUES PRESENTED

On December 27, 1988, the debtor filed its motion seeking to assume its lease with the City of Memphis. The debtor now contends that the agreement between the debt- or and the City is not a true lease. Therefore, the first issues presented are whether *800 the agreement is in fact a lease and whether it is subject to assumption by Rachels Industries. Other critical issues are whether there has been a default or defaults of the debtor’s obligations so as to trigger 11 U.S.C. § 365(b), whether proper notice of any alleged defaults was given by the City, and if so, whether the debtor has cured or provided adequate assurance of prompt curing of any defaults. Further, if the lease may be assumed, has the debtor provided adequate assurance of future performance under the lease? The City has presented proof of several defaults, any one or combination of which the City asserts are material defaults, and the Court must analyze each of those asserted defaults to determine whether any one or more present obstacles to the debtor’s assumption.

The Third National Bank and First National Bank of Atlanta (hereinafter “lenders”) are the primary secured creditors of the debtor, and those lenders originally supported the debtor’s motion to assume the lease. Further, the unsecured creditors’ committee supports the debtor’s motion to assume. However, the lenders, subsequent to the trial and briefing, have withdrawn their support of the debtor’s assumption. See, “Lenders’ Notice of Default and Termination of Debtor’s Use of Cash Collateral and Withdrawal of Support for Debtor's Motion to Assume Harvester Lease,” filed December 27, 1989.

HISTORY OF CASE

This Chapter 11 case was filed on October 6, 1988. As yet, a disclosure has not been approved and a final plan has not yet been submitted to creditors for consideration. However, the debtor has undertaken a substantial liquidation of its assets. By prior Court orders, the operating manufacturing divisions of the debtor have been sold, with the proceeds going to the secured lenders. The debtor has also been pursuing avoidance litigation and collection of accounts receivable. The debtor has asserted in open court that the primary asset remaining is the lease of the Harvester facility, and the debtor intends to propose an amended plan, to be supported by the unsecured creditors’ committee, which plan would incorporate the assumption of the Harvester lease and utilization of that Harvester property for the generation of long term income to satisfy, at least in part, claims of creditors. The City of Memphis is a creditor of the debtor; however, a judicial determination has not been made as to whether the City remains secured. 1

IS THE AGREEMENT A LEASE?

At the hearing on the debtor’s motion to assume the lease, the debtor took the position that there was no default under § 365(b), or at least no material default, and that any alleged defaults related to conditions which existed at the Harvester facility prior to the execution of the agreement between the City and Rachels Industries, Inc. As previously noted, the debtor had filed a motion to assume a “lease,” but in its post-hearing memoranda the debtor took the position that the proof at the hearing established that the written agreement between the City and Rachels was not in fact a true lease as contemplated by § 365. Rather, the debtor now asserts that the agreement was nothing more than a “structure designed to provide a property tax abatement for the debtor.” (Memorandum of the debtor, p. 2). The City, of course, points out that in the debt- or’s motion filed December 27, 1988, the debtor stated that it was a “lessee” and that it desired to “assume said leases.” Further, in a motion for continuance filed July 14, 1989, jointly by the lenders, the debtor and the unsecured creditors’ committee, the pleadings stated that the “debt- or is lessee under a certain Lease Agreement dated December 13, 1985, between Rachels Industries, Inc. as lessee and the City of Memphis as lessor.” As the City asserts, this matter was tried for some five *801 days of court time as a contested matter under § 365. Thus, even if the Court could accept the debtor’s argument that the agreement is not a “lease,” the question would still remain as to whether § 365 is applicable if the agreement would nevertheless be an executory contract.

However, the Court does not need to fully address that question, since the Court concludes that the debtor is estopped from changing its position. Having taken the position in pleadings as well as in hearings that the agreement was a lease subject to assumption by the debtor, the debtor may not now be heard to take an alternative position that the agreement is less than a lease. The debtor and creditors’ committee argue that this Court must look to the “economic substance” of this transaction, citing In re PCH Associates, 804 F.2d 193, 199 (2d Cir.1986), in order to determine whether there is a true lease or a mere financing transaction between the City and Rachels. The Court has engaged in that analysis and while the lease is clearly related to the financial transaction, that fact does not render the lease a nullity. The lease was a part of a transaction to enable Rachels to benefit from use of the Harvester facility but to also enable the City to encourage industrial and economic development for the City. To permit the debtor to choose only some aspects of that transaction while avoiding others would be “offensive to equitable principles.” In re Martin Brothers Toolmakers, Inc., 796 F.2d 1435, 1441 (11th Cir.1986). Further, this is not a situation of the City/landlord attempting to escape the consequences of an investor/creditor status. In re PCH Associates, supra, at 200. Rather, the City admits it has two roles, one as landlord and one as creditor.

As the Sixth Circuit has observed, exec-utory contracts or leases involve “obligations which continue into the future.” In re Jolly,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 B.R. 797, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 108, 1990 WL 5039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rachels-industries-inc-tnwb-1990.