In Re Rexplore Drilling, Inc., Debtor. J. Hunt Perkins, Trustee v. Petro Supply Company, Inc.

971 F.2d 1219, 1992 WL 183733
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 5, 1992
Docket91-6145
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 971 F.2d 1219 (In Re Rexplore Drilling, Inc., Debtor. J. Hunt Perkins, Trustee v. Petro Supply Company, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Rexplore Drilling, Inc., Debtor. J. Hunt Perkins, Trustee v. Petro Supply Company, Inc., 971 F.2d 1219, 1992 WL 183733 (6th Cir. 1992).

Opinions

CONTIE, Senior Circuit Judge.

Defendant Petro Supply Company appeals the district court’s order in favor of plaintiff J. Hunt Perkins, the trustee in bankruptcy, affirming the bankruptcy court’s decision finding that an agreed state court judgment was voidable by the bankruptcy trustee as a preferential transfer.

I.

Petro Supply Company is a Kentucky corporation engaged in the business of selling equipment and supplies to oil and gas producers. During 1984 and 1985 Petro sold over $52,000.00 worth of oil and gas equipment and supplies to the debtor, Rexplore Drilling, Inc. The debtor, formerly known as Koil Drilling, Inc., operated oil and gas leases for its companion corporation, Rexplore, Inc. Rexplore, Inc. was engaged in the business of selling interests in the leases to raise money for its operating company, Rexplore Drilling, Inc.

Most of the oil and gas leases in Grayson County, Kentucky had been purchased by Rexplore, Inc. from Compass Petroleum Industries, Inc., by acquiring the common stock of Compass from its parent, Pilgrim Coal Corporation. The debtor, Rexplore Drilling, Inc., was the guarantor of a $550,-000 promissory note and mortgage given to Pilgrim for the purchase of the leases. Rexplore, Inc. was prohibited from allowing any third-party liens to be placed on the properties until the note was paid off. If any such liens were placed on the property, Pilgrim was given the right to foreclose. With this background in mind, we turn to the facts giving rise to the instant dispute.

By the spring of 1985, Rexplore Drilling began to suffer severe financial difficulties. During this time, Rexplore Drilling was unable to pay its bills as they became due. Although Rexplore Drilling continued to meet its payroll, it ceased to remit employee withholding payments to the IRS. The company’s computers as well as some field equipment were repossessed by creditors. The company’s bank accounts were subjected to numerous garnishments, and it responded by moving its funds to accounts with different names. The company cut its office staff from a high of 39 workers in late 1984 to thirteen by October, 1985.

Because Rexplore Drilling was unable to pay its obligation to Petro, on May 16, 1985, Petro filed mechanic’s and material-man’s liens on leases in McLean, Ohio and Todd counties in Kentucky in the amount of $16,195.54. Petro filed a lawsuit in Da-viess Circuit Court to enforce these liens on October 22,1985. In addition, Petro filed a materialman’s lien, in the amount of $52,-141.04, in Grayson County, Kentucky on a lease held by Rexplore, Inc.’s subsidiary Compass Petroleum.

The Grayson lien created a problem for Rexplore, Inc. because its contract of sale with Pilgrim Coal, from which it purchased Compass, required it to keep the property free of all such encumbrances. Rexplore, Inc. defaulted on its contract of sale, and Pilgrim brought suit on March 4, 1985 seeking foreclosure on the mortgage.

In an attempt to settle this foreclosure, Pilgrim, Compass, Rexplore, Inc., and Rexplore Drilling entered into negotiations concerning the Grayson leases. On October 30, 1985, the parties entered into a “Second Settlement Agreement” with the lienholders, including Petro, providing for monthly payments of $5,000.00 until the lien against Compass’ interest was satisfied in full. Once the debt was fully paid, Petro was to release its lien against Compass. As part of this settlement, Petro agreed not to proceed against any of the other liens on leases in McLean, Ohio, Todd or Grayson counties and executed a release of lien to this effect. However, the parties agreed that if Rexplore Drilling missed a payment, the entire amount of the obligation became due immediately. An Agreed Judgment was entered in the Da-[1221]*1221viess Circuit Court on November 4, 1985, incorporating the entirety of the Second Settlement Agreement. It was stipulated that this judgment was not secured.

On November 22, 1985 Rexplore Drilling defaulted on the first payment due under the terms of the Agreed Judgment. On December 9, 1985 Petro sought a garnishment order from the Daviess Circuit Court in order to attach funds held by Ashland Oil, Inc. which were owed to Rexplore Drilling. Ashland paid the sum of $21,-070.05 to Petro in January, 1986. A subsequent garnishment order was again issued on February 3,1986, which Ashland did not pay, although it held additional funds belonging to Rexplore.

On March 12, 1986 Rexplore Drilling filed for bankruptcy protection under Chapter 11. The bankruptcy court appointed J. Hunt Perkins as trustee on August 27, 1986. The trustee investigated those leases operated by Rexplore Drilling in which title was held by Ashland Oil. As a result, it was determined that Ashland Oil held an additional $107,540.05 which was to be credited to Rexplore Drilling.

Rexplore Drilling filed schedules along with its Chapter 11 petition listing total liabilities of $3,001,246.30 and total valued assets of $682,652.60. Of the listed assets, $636,223.10 in contingent claims were listed. The schedules also listed, at undetermined values, interests in oil leases and in limited partnerships. These leases were subject to mechanic’s liens, EPA compliance obligations and other expenses. Therefore, it was difficult to approximate their value.

When preparing its statement of financial affairs and schedules, the debtor failed to list as a debt a $1.8 million mortgage to the Indemnity Insurance Company of North America (“UNA”). Mr. Charles Boarman, Rexplore Drilling’s counsel, did not list this mortgage as a liability because he considered the loan “improvidently granted.”

On March 21, 1988, the trustee commenced this adversary proceeding against Petro alleging that the signing and entry of the Agreed Judgment, the payment of $21,-070.94 by Ashland Oil in answer to the garnishment, and the subsequent issue of a second order of garnishment on the Agreed Judgment, all constituted preferences under Kentucky Revised Statutes §§ 378.060, 378.070. On May 16, 1991 the bankruptcy court found that the Agreed Judgment and the garnishment orders issued pursuant thereto were avoidable as preferences, and granted judgment to the trustee in the amount of $21,070.94. The bankruptcy court reasoned:

The agreed judgment against the debtor in favor of Petro constitutes a judgment suffered by the debtor in contemplation of insolvency with a design to prefer Petro over other creditors. The terms of the agreed judgment were consistent with the terms of the Second Settlement Agreement, the objective of which was to keep the debtor afloat by making monthly payments to certain key creditors, including Petro. The garnishments issued on the judgment resulted in transfers of property of the debtor to Petro, which transfers are avoidable by the trustee for the benefit of creditors generally.

Joint Appendix at 42-43. The district court affirmed the Bankruptcy Court’s decision and Petro filed a timely notice of appeal.

II.

Petro first argues that the bankruptcy court erred in applying K.R.S. § 378.060 to the facts of this case, because that statute requires a finding that the debtor subjectively intended to prefer one creditor over another, and since there was no evidence of intent to prefer, the Agreed Judgment is not avoidable by the bankruptcy trustee.

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971 F.2d 1219, 1992 WL 183733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rexplore-drilling-inc-debtor-j-hunt-perkins-trustee-v-petro-ca6-1992.