In re Stiletto Mfg., Inc.

588 B.R. 762
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedJuly 19, 2018
DocketCASE NO. 18-01051-5-JNC
StatusPublished

This text of 588 B.R. 762 (In re Stiletto Mfg., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Stiletto Mfg., Inc., 588 B.R. 762 (N.C. 2018).

Opinion

Joseph N. Callaway, United States Bankruptcy Judge

At a hearing conducted on July 2, 2018, in Greenville, North Carolina, the court considered the Motion for Relief from Automatic Stay filed in this case by Mr. John Enderle on May 29, 2018 (D.E. 85; the "Motion"), together with the Response in Opposition to John Enderle's Motion for Relief from Automatic Stay filed by CapitalNexus, LLC ("CN") on June 11, 2018 (D.E. 100; the "Response"). The hearing was attended by counsel for the debtor, counsel for CN, the Bankruptcy Administrator, Mr. Enderle, and his counsel.1

*764Upon its conclusion, the court found that the automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362 did not apply, as the underlying sale was occurring in the ordinary course of business of the Debtor. The court issued a cursory order to that effect on July 3, 2018 (D.E. 121; the "Order").2 This memorandum opinion provides a more detailed discussion of the findings of fact and conclusions of law supporting the Order.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Stiletto Manufacturing, Inc. (the "Debtor") filed a voluntary petition for relief under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on March 2, 2018 (the "Petition Date"). The Debtor filed its schedules on March 23, 2018 (D.E. 26), which indicated that both CN and Mr. Enderle were shareholders.3 The schedules also identified an executory contract with Mr. Enderle, although the subject of the contract was not disclosed. See D.E. 26 at 24, 44. The Debtor is in the business of manufacturing and selling custom catamaran boats from its business location in Columbia, North Carolina. According to its Schedule G, at the time of filing the Debtor had at least nine (9) pending contracts with various buyers for the purchase of custom made boats, and construction had commenced on four (4) boats. See id. at 23-25. One of those prepetition contracts upon which work had begun was the "Stiletto X-Series Yacht Construction Agreement" entered August 3, 2017 by Mr. Enderle and the Debtor (the "Original Agreement").

Pursuant to its terms, the Debtor was to manufacture a custom catamaran in its XC model line with a length of thirty (30) feet, a beam of eighteen (18) feet, and a displacement of 1,750 pounds (the "Boat"). Mr. Enderle was to pay the contract price for the Boat with a deposit and subsequent periodic progress payments. On April 27, 2018, Mr. Enderle and the Debtor modified the Original Agreement in writing (the "Modified Agreement"). According to the testimony of Mr. Enderle, among other things the Modified Agreement removed some of the custom construction options he had previously selected, the most important alteration being the substitution of the required boom and longeron materials from carbon fiber to aluminum. This change resulted in a significant price reduction and earlier anticipated completion date.

Pursuant to the Modified Agreement, Mr. Enderle was to pay a total of $124,772.00 (the "Purchase Price") for the Boat, plus taxes, registration, and documentation fees. The Boat was to be completed and Mr. Enderle was to take delivery on June 15, 2018. Mr. Enderle paid a deposit, bought some building materials outright from third party suppliers for contract credit, and made the necessary periodic progress payments to the Debtor. By the time he was to take possession of the Boat on June 15, 2018, Mr. Enderle had paid the full amount of the Purchase Price to the Debtor. He visited the Debtor's *765facility at least four times during the construction period. At his most recent visit, a week or two prior to the hearing, he observed that the Boat was nearly completed, with the balance of the work being only the attachment of a finished cockpit to the hulls, along with rigging and associated hardware. Notwithstanding the need to complete these relatively minor final items, when the Motion was filed, the Boat was at a stage in the construction process where upon final payment a certificate of origin could be produced by the Debtor as the manufacturer, and Mr. Enderle as the buyer was entitled to apply for and receive the initial maritime certificate of title issuable by the United States Coast Guard.

POSITIONS OF THE PARTIES

Mr. Enderle argues that the Modified Agreement was executed and performed in the ordinary course of the Debtor's business. Therefore, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 363(c)(1), no prior court approval for the execution and performance of it was necessary. Notwithstanding that the performance of the Modified Agreement is authorized by § 363(c), he also seeks relief from the automatic stay of § 362(a) in order to finalize the sale and transfer of the Boat, and avoid any risk of violating the automatic stay. In essence, he seeks a "comfort order."

In the Response, CN argues that Mr. Enderle is not entitled to receive possession and transfer of the boat because the Modified Agreement is an executory contract that has neither been assumed nor rejected by the Debtor. CN contends that it is in the best interest of the bankruptcy estate for the Debtor to reject the Modified Agreement as an executory contract. In support, it relies upon many of the same points expounded in its pending Motion to Convert Case to One Under Chapter 7 (D.E. 94; the "Motion to Convert"), which is set for hearing on July 18, 2018. CN asserts that the Debtor is no longer operating, that the Boat is unfinished, and that "as early as May 9, 2018, the Debtor indicated to the Court and creditors of the Estate that it would file a Motion pursuant to section 363 to sell all assets of the Estate." Response, D.E. 100 at 2, ¶ 6. Allowing Mr. Enderle to receive title to the Boat, CN maintains, is tantamount to an end run of the Bankruptcy Code's priority scheme by effectively satisfying Mr. Enderle's unsecured claim in full with resultant diminution of estate assets in the event of future liquidation.

DISCUSSION

The lynchpin of this dispute is whether the Original Agreement was brought into the estate as part of the debtor's ordinary business and then whether the Debtor could execute and be bound by the Modified Agreement without prior court approval. This inquiry is complicated somewhat by the fact that the Modified Agreement applied to an agreement initially entered prepetition. There is no dispute that the Original Agreement was executory on the Petition Date. The initial query thus becomes whether a chapter 11 debtor in possession may, together with the non-debtor party to an executory contract, rescind an executory contract post-petition without court approval if the sales contract (and thus presumably its rescission) is an activity otherwise within the ordinary course of the debtor's business. For the reasons that follow, the court concludes that it can.

I.

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Bluebook (online)
588 B.R. 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-stiletto-mfg-inc-nceb-2018.