In Re Sorrell

286 B.R. 798, 2002 WL 31757421
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Utah
DecidedNovember 6, 2002
Docket19-21073
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 286 B.R. 798 (In Re Sorrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Sorrell, 286 B.R. 798, 2002 WL 31757421 (Utah 2002).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

WILLIAM T. THURMAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The Debtors’ request for confirmation of their Chapter 12 plan of Reorganization (the “Plan”) came on for hearing before the Honorable William T. Thurman on October 23, 2002 (“the Hearing”). David T. Berry appeared representing the Debtors, Michael N. Emery appeared on behalf of Mancos Valley Bank and Duane H. Gill-man appeared representing himself as the Chapter 12 Trustee. After hearing evidence and argument thereon, and based on the same, the Court makes and renders this Memorandum Decision.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The Debtors are residents of Monticello, Utah. Mr. Sorrell has been a farmer for the better part of the last twenty years. Mrs. Sorrell has worked on the farm, but at the present time, and for the last two to three years, has been employed as a loan officer for the Farm Service Agency in Monticello. Evidence produced at the Hearing in the form of testimony and the year 2001 personal tax return of the Debtors, indicated that the Debtors received more than 50% of their income from farming operations during the year 2001. The Debtors filed for relief under Chapter 12 on May 24, 2002. They had previously filed for relief under Chapter 11 on December 5, 2001 which was subsequently dismissed pursuant to a motion filed by the United States Trustee. That case was dismissed by order dated May 22, 2002.

The Debtors have owned two separate parcels of real estate that have been farmed in the past. One parcel is located in the southwestern part of Colorado, in Cohone County. This is commonly referred to as the Cohone Farm. It consists of approximately 504 acres and has been primarily used as an alfalfa farm. Associated with that farm are a sprinkler, a pivot and side roll, planting and harvesting equipment and various items of farm related equipment, buildings, vehicles and water rights provided by a separate water district. The other parcel of land consists of approximately 320 acres located near Monticello, Utah which is located in southeastern Utah. This farm is referred to as the Monticello Farm. The Debtors currently reside on the Monticello Farm. The Monticello Farm has, in the past, been used for growing some pasture grass, wheat and some oats, but at the present time, it is used as pasture, although the Debtors intend to grow the other products as well. The Debtors also own fifteen head of cows along with five heifer calves, eight steer calves and one yearling bull. The calves were born in February, 2002.

The Debtors have cared, maintained and fed the cattle during the last ten months primarily from resources they purchased with funds generated from non-farm employment. On May 24, 2002, the Debtors had approximately 50 tons of hay on the Monticello Farm which was purchased off site and is being used to feed the cattle.

*801 The Debtors maintain certain items of farm equipment on the Monticello Farm, including a John Deere double disc planting drill, a Case Backhoe, John Deere 4630 Tractor, a Bush Hog, and other miscellaneous hand and other tools and equipment. Finally, a 4800 Heston Bailer was transported to Nevada in anticipation of a sale.

The Debtors’ secured debt structure includes three farm real estate loans from Mancos Valley Bank of Colorado (the “Bank”). These loans are all cross collateralized with a balance on May 24, 2002 of $669,712.08. The Bank also has several other smaller' loans which secured all equipment, inventory, livestock and their proceeds covering items and livestock located either in Colorado or Utah (the “Personal Property Loans”). The balance of these other loans, all cross collateralized with each other, was $94,528.53 on the date of the petition. All equipment subject to the Personal Property Loans is located either on the Cohone or the Monticello Farm, with the exception of a Heston bail-er which was transported to Nevada in anticipation of a sale.

The Debtors’ remaining secured debt consists of, (1) a purchase money security interest in a Heston mower in favor of Agco with a balance claimed of approximately $25,000; (2) a lease with John Deere on another tractor; (3) a lien in favor of the DC Credit Union on a Dodge Truck; (4) a hen in favor of Key Bank on a Nomad trailer; and (5) a lien in favor of the Delores Water Conservancy District in Colorado securing a claim of $14,219.84.

In addition to the evidence of secured claims listed above, the Debtors Schedules were admitted into evidence. 1 Schedule F reflects approximately $90,000 in unsecured claims (not including any deficiency from a secured claim). Schedule E, listing priority claims, reflects zero owing.

The Debtors have proposed a plan to treat both the unsecured and secured claims. The Debtors’ plan proposes a mixture of surrendering certain assets and keeping the rest subject to certain modified payment terms. The plan proposes to surrender the Cohone Farm, valued by the Court at a prior hearing at $596,000, to the Bank. The Debtors seek to retain the Monticello Farm and pay the remaining balance, after credit for the $596,000 value of the Cohone Farm surrendered (approximately $669,712 plus accrued interest and fees, less $596,000), or approximately $113,000 for the purpose of this hearing, amortized over twenty years at 6.9% interest. The contract rate of interest on the farmland loans is greater than 6.9%. Additionally, the Debtors propose to surrender all farm equipment and related items on the Cohone Farm to the Bank for values also found by the Court at a prior hearing. The water rights are to be surrendered to Delores Water Conservancy District. The Debtors propose to surrender the Heston mower to Agco in full satisfaction of the Agco claim, but propose to keep the John Deere Tractor, the Dodge truck and the Nomad trailer and pay the agreed amounts through the plan.

As part of their treatment of the Bank’s Personal Property Loans, the Debtors propose to deliver cash to the bank representing sale proceeds from cow sales that occurred during the prior Chapter 11 case in the amount of $4,756.48; surrender and or sell ten cows and the thirteen calves (some immediately and some in 2003) and retain the yearling bull and five cows for breeding purposes; and rebuild the herd. The proceeds from the cow sales and calf sales will be paid to the Bank upon receipt or no *802 later than December 15, 2002 for the calves and September 15, 2003 from the cows. The Debtors also intend to sell the Heston bailer in Nevada for $3,500 and deliver its proceeds to the Bank. After such contemplated sales and payments to the Bank, the remaining secured portion of the Bank’s Personal Property Loans claim is reduced to $24,865 to be paid at 6.9% interest per annum over 5 years. Finally, the Debtors propose to retain all Monticello Farm related equipment.

In order to accomplish this creditor treatment, the Debtors’ Plan proposes monthly payments of $1550 (orally increased to $1565 at the Hearing) to the Chapter 12 Trustee to pay unsecured claims over five years approximately 10% of their claims. The Plan proposes a fifty month amortization of the Bank’s Personal Property Loan claim to be paid by the Trustee from the funds collected from the Debtors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
286 B.R. 798, 2002 WL 31757421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sorrell-utb-2002.