In re Roselli Moving & Storage Corp.

568 B.R. 592
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJune 8, 2017
DocketCase No.: 12-76139-AST
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 568 B.R. 592 (In re Roselli Moving & Storage Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Roselli Moving & Storage Corp., 568 B.R. 592 (N.Y. 2017).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER OVERRULING OBJECTIONTO_T^US; TEE’S FINAL REPORT

Alan S. Trust, United States Bankruptcy-Judge

Background and Issues Presented

On October 9, 2012, debtor, Roselli Moving & Storage Corp. (“Debtor”) filed the above captioned chapter 7 case, [dkt item 1] A number of issues arose in connection with the filing and handling of this case by the principal of Debtor and its initial counsel, none of which bear on the current dispute.

Allan B. Mendelsohn was duly appointed and qualified as the Chapter 7 Trustee of Debtor’s bankruptcy estate (the “Trustee”). As a result of his investigation, the Trustee determined that this bankruptcy estate had claims against Debtor and its related entities regarding the transfers of certain assets. Specifically, Debtor’s principal, Mr. Villano, testified that in addition to his role as former president of Debtor, he was affiliated with a number of entities, including one known as Moving Storage Center, to which various assets of Debtor' were transferred, including all accounts receivable of Debtor. In addition, Mr. Villano testified at the 341 Meeting, that Debtor did not receive any consideration from Moving Storage Center for the transfers of the company’s assets.

The Trustee asserted various claims against Debtor and its affiliated entities, which resulted in a settlement of the estate’s claims without the necessity of filing an adversary proceeding. The settlement was embodied in a stipulation of settlement1 between the Trustee, Debtor and various Debtor-affiliated entities and provided, inter alia, for the payment of $125,000 (the “Settlement Sum”) to the estate in full and final satisfaction and release of the estate’s claims asserted by the Trustee (the “Settlement”); notably, the Settlement did not call for a return of the property transferred by Debtor back to the estate. The Settlement was annexed to a 9019 motion seeking approval of this compromise, which was filed and served by the Trustee on July 30, 2013 [dkt item 85], to which no objection was filed. The Court approved the Settlement by Order entered on August 26, 2013 (the “Settlement Order”). [dkt item 86] No appeal was filed from the Settlement Order and it is a final order.

After claims were resolved and the estate ready for approval of a final report and determination of allowable administrative expenses, on December 21, 2016, the Trustee submitted his final report, which calls for a substantial but less than 100% distribution to unsecured creditors (the “Final Report”), [dkt item 108] That same day, the Trustee and his professionals filed their respective applications for compensation (the “Applications”), [dkt items 109, 110, 111]

On December 21, 2016, the United States Trustee docketed a statement in reference to the Applications that it “has reviewed the time records submitted by the Trustee and the fee application(s) submitted by the professional retained by the Trustee on behalf of the estate. The United States Trustee does not intend to file an objection.”

On December 22, 2016, the Trustee filed a Notice of Hearing of his Final Report [594]*594and Applications, which scheduled a hearing for February 14, 2017 (the “Notice”), [dkt item 112] The Notice was served on all parties entitled to notice; the hearing was later rescheduled to March 21, 2017.

On February 6, 2017, Citibank, N.A. (“Citibank”) filed the sole objection to the Final Report, asserting that it held a lien against Debtor’s pre-petition assets prior to their -transfer to Moving Storage Center, and that as a result, it holds a lien against the Settlement Sum (the “Objection”), [dkt item 115] Citibank did not object to allowance of the commissions, fees or expenses sought by the Trustee and his professionals in the Applications.

On March 13, 2017, the Trustee filed opposition to the Citibank Objection (the “Response”), [dkt item 117]

On March 21, 2017, the Court held a hearing on the Final Report, the Applications, the Objection, and the Response, and took the matter on submission. Analysis

Citibank’s position that its pre-petition lien against Debtor’s assets extends to the Settlement Sum is flawed. In support of its Objection, Citibank erroneously relies on and misreads a decision of Judge Grossman of this Court, In re Milton Abeles, LLC, No. 812-70158-REG, 2013 WL 5304014 (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Sept. 20, 2013). Citibank cites Abeles as holding that a creditor with a pre-petition perfected security interest in a debtor’s assets and their proceeds “is entitled to the Proceeds of the trustee’s recovery of a fraudulent conveyance of the collateral.” Objection at para 7. [dkt item 115] Abeles does not so hold; and, in fact, the holding is diametrically the opposite.

After a thoughtful discussion of NY UCC Article 9 provisions and Bankruptcy Code Section 552, Judge Grossman addressed an issue involving a lender in a similar circumstance to Citibank (there Capital One), and stated:

Pursuant to section 9-312(b)(l) a security interest in a deposit account can only be perfected by “control”. Capital One had, and presumably still has, a perfected security interest in the Debtor’s deposit account maintained at Capital One and all of the cash contained therein, if any. However, once the Debtor’s funds left the deposit account and were transferred to [the transferee]—in this case, two years prior to the bankruptcy filing—Capital One no longer had “control” of those funds and its interest became unperfected.
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[T]he secured creditor with a prepetition, perfected security interest in the debtor’s property and the “proceeds, product, offspring, or profits of such property” retains that prior perfected security interest after the bankruptcy case is filed, unless the court orders otherwise based on the “equities of the case.”
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For the reasons given earlier in this Decision, section 552(b), thus does not improve Capital One’s position with respect to the settlement funds being held by the Trustee. If, as this Court has found, Capital One was [sic] did not hold a perfected security interest in proceeds prior to the bankruptcy, section 552(b)(1) does not come into play.

Abeles, 2013 WL 5304014, at *2-3 (emphasis in original). Thus, to the extent the Trustee’s Settlement related to transfers of cash deposits by Debtor in which Citibank had a perfected security interest pri- or to Debtor’s transfer, Abeles is directly against Citibank, as Citibank’s security interest lost its perfected status, if any, upon Debtor’s transfer.

[595]*595The only potential door left open, if any, in Abeles is the court’s statement in dicta in the following paragraph:

Capital One cites several cases in support of its position that a security interest in a deposit account perfected by ‘control’ as defined under the NY-UCC pre-petition, also secures an interest in funds transferred out of the deposit account to a third party, and subsequently recovered by the Trustee in bankruptcy, post-petition. These authorities are, for the most part, distinguishable as cases involving the transfer of property, not deposit account funds.

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Bluebook (online)
568 B.R. 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-roselli-moving-storage-corp-nyeb-2017.