In Re Speed Fab-Crete of Nevada

57 B.R. 720, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 6675
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Nevada
DecidedFebruary 18, 1986
Docket19-10464
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 57 B.R. 720 (In Re Speed Fab-Crete of Nevada) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Speed Fab-Crete of Nevada, 57 B.R. 720, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 6675 (Nev. 1986).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION and ORDER

JAMES H. THOMPSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

The matter before the Court is the Motion of Kimmel Construction, Inc. (Kimmel) for an order allowing administrative claim pursuant to Bankruptcy Code § 503(b). A final hearing on the merits was conducted on November 19, 1985, and the issues submitted to the Court for decision. For the reasons set forth below, Kimmel’s Motion is denied.

I

The debtor (Speed Fab) filed on December 30, 1983, its petition under Chapter 11 of Title 11 U.S.C. Speed Fab was in the business of fabricating and erecting pre-stressed concrete beams and slabs. Prior to filing the petition Speed Fab was under contract with Kimmel to supply and erect concrete panels on a construction site where Kimmel was a subcontractor. Speed Fab continued to perform after filing the petition by delivering and erecting panels until it abandoned the contract work on March 27, 1984.

Kimmel contends that Speed Fab’s continuing performance after filing of the petition constituted an assumption of the contract which can be “legally recognized” and “approved” by this court. Kimmel further argues that since debtor assumed the contract and later rejected it by abandoning the work, that Kimmel has incurred post-petition damages which should be allowed as an administrative claim under § 503(b).

The trustee and an unsecured creditor argue that the court never gave its specific approval to an assumption of the executory contract as required by § 365(a), and therefore, there can be no postpetition breach of a contract not assumed with court approval. Hence, Kimmel’s damages, if any, would be prepetition as to which it would be an unsecured creditor. See Bankruptcy Code [11 U.S.C.] § 365(g)(1) and § 502(g).

II

Kimmel argues that § 365(a) does not apply because Speed Fab was a debtor-in-possession under § 1108 and its continued performance was an assumption of a contract and an act in an ordinary course of its business. Kimmel relies on In re Ridgewood Sacramento, Inc., 20 B.R. 443 (Bankr.E.D.Cal.1982). There the debtor accepted a second shipment of goods from the creditor pursuant to an executory contract. These goods enabled the debtor to continue operating its business and tended to preserve the estate. Ridgewood held since the debtor had, pursuant to § 1107 the power of a trustee under § 365(a), that the debtor was permitted to assume the executory contract as an act in the ordinary course of its business under § 1108. However, Ridgewood erroneously proceeds *722 upon the premise that a debtor is in the business of assuming executory contracts. Ridgewood further ignores the clearly expressed duty of a trustee or D.I.P. to obtain specific court approval under § 365(a). See Matter of Whitcomb & Keller Mortgage Co., 715 F.2d 375 (7th Cir.1983). To hold that operating the business is equivalent to assumption of all contracts incident to the operation would be to deny a Chapter 11 debtor the flexibility it was intended to have by Bankruptcy Code § 365(d)(2). Although it is correct that the debtor has the authority to continue operating the business without court approval after filing the petition, the Chapter 11 debtor also has until the confirmation of a plan to decide whether or not to assume or reject exec-utory contracts. Operating the business maintains the status quo, while the assumption of an executory contract binds the reorganized debtor in the future and creates new administrative obligations. In re Margie Publishing Co., Inc., 20 B.R. 933, 935 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1982). It is the debtor’s reorganization plan — not merely the continued operation of the business— which is the expression of the debtor’s future intentions regarding the business. Sections 365(a) and 365(d)(2) would be for most purposes meaningless if the court were to interpret § 1108 as Kimmel suggests.

Assuming, arguendo, Ridgewood’s expansive reading of § 1108 is correct, 1 the facts preclude its application here. In Ridgewood, the debtor not only received the mill work but had also received payment for the mill work by its sub-purchaser. Clearly, the estate was not only preserved but also increased by the creditor’s postpetition performance and the claim was entitled to be treated as an expense of administration under § 503. The result in Ridgewood is correct but could have been reached without-analysis of assumption or not of an executory contract. The debt arose postpetition by the use of goods to continue operation of debtor’s business.

In the present matter, the parties’ positions are reversed. Here, it is the debtor, Speed Fab, which supplied material and labor to Kimmel, who then made progress payments to the debtor, less a sum retained as a retent. Certainly the estate cannot be said to have been preserved or enhanced within the intent of § 503. Therefore, in a non -Ridgewood factual setting, as here, the court must be guided by the requirements of § 365(a).

Ill

Congress provided in the 1978 Bankruptcy Code, § 365(a), that the assumption of an executory contract by the trustee is “subject to the court’s approval.” Congress repealed § 70(b) of the former Bankruptcy Act under which a split of authority had developed as to whether an assumption of an executory contract required formal court approval, instead of inferring an assumption from the conduct of the trustee. See In re By-Rite Distributing, Inc., 47 B.R. 660, 665 (Bankr.D.Utah 1985). As Judge Lundin noted in In re Kelly Lyn Franchise Co., 26 B.R. 441, 444 (Bankr.M.D.Tenn.1983), even under the Act, the majority rule, and the better rule, required prior judicial approval before allowing an assumption.

Kimmel cites two Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals decisions in support of its contention that formal prior court approval is not required: Local Joint Executive Board v. Hotel Circle, Inc., 613 F.2d 210 (9th Cir.1980) and In re Huntington, Ltd., 654 F.2d 578 (9th Cir.1981). Hotel Circle construed § 70(b) and § 313(1) of the former Act as they related to the assumption of a collective bargaining agreement under the National Labor Relations Act. The court held a receiver could not assume such a labor agreement by conforming to its terms. But in Huntington the Ninth Circuit clear *723 ly limited the holding of Hotel Circle to collective bargaining agreements only, holding that in some circumstances a receiver might assume a non-labor executory contract by actions constituting a clear manifestation of an intent to assume. Thus, Huntington held that a debtor could assume an executory contract by conduct, subject only to later court approval. Again, Huntington construed provisions of the former Act and both it and

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Bluebook (online)
57 B.R. 720, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 6675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-speed-fab-crete-of-nevada-nvb-1986.