In Re Synfax Manufacturing, Inc.

126 B.R. 30, 33 ERC (BNA) 1165, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 2854
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedDecember 19, 1990
Docket19-11903
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 126 B.R. 30 (In Re Synfax Manufacturing, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Synfax Manufacturing, Inc., 126 B.R. 30, 33 ERC (BNA) 1165, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 2854 (N.J. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

WILLIAM F. TUOHEY, Bankruptcy Judge.

This case comes before the court upon motion of the debtor for entry of an order directing it to turn over proceeds from the sale of certain personal property to Summit Trust Company, a secured creditor in this case. Subsequent to the filing of the motion and responses thereto, and a hearing on the motion and responses, this court, pursuant to separate motion, converted the case from one under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101, 1 et seq., to one under chapter 7; the order was filed on August 30, 1990.

Because conversion of this case may have had some bearing on the positions taken by the respective parties to the instant motion, this court reopened argument in the case and invited the trustee appointed to administer the assets of the debtor’s estate, as well as all other interested parties, to make any further arguments which the conversion may have engendered. The court has considered the motion, memoran-da, briefs, and arguments of the parties and has determined that Summit Trust is entitled to receive the proceeds of an earlier sale of the debtor’s property which are currently being held in escrow, and hereby issues its order with this opinion granting the debtor’s motion.

This case was originally commenced by the filing of a voluntary petition for relief under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on August 29, 1989. Synfax continued operations under the protection of this court but simultaneously advertized for sale all of its personal property, including its technology and liquid plant equipment, all of which had an appraised value of $661,-000.00. Some of the personal property was sold for $306,000.00, leaving assets with an appraised value of $355,000.00 in the estate.

*32 On June 14, 1990, the debtor filed its motion requesting an order of this court authorizing the sale of the remainder of its personal property to Nashua Corporation, for a sales price of $500,000.00. The sales price was, therefore, approximately $150,-000.00 more in compensation than the value assigned to the property. In the order authorizing sale free and clear of liens, claims, encumbrances and responsibility under § 363 (entered July 10, 1990), the court ordered that proceeds should be disbursed only on further order of the court.

In a separate order filed July 27, 1990, this court ordered that $350,000.00 of the proceeds from the sale to Nashua be turned over to Summit Trust Co. The remaining $150,000.00 of the proceeds was to be held in escrow by Summit pending further order of the court. It is this $150,-000.00 which is the subject of the current motion to turnover the proceeds of sale to Summit Trust Co.

The debtor’s motion was opposed by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) and Ramfair Associates and Mar Realty Company, the debtor’s former landlords. DEP asserted that no funds should be released until the clean-up required by N.J.S.A. 13:1K-12 is completed, and that the proceeds remaining in escrow should be applied to that clean-up of the debtor’s former leased premises. The landlords asserted several grounds in their objection to the motion; essentially, however, the landlords rely upon the inequity of the situation. They claim that the creation of a secured position for Summit Trust on any of the debtor’s assets constitutes an insider preference, that changed circumstances since the entry of the cash collateral order in the chapter 11 case justify modification of that order in order to permit payment of rent, that the claim of the landlords constitutes a claim which may be charged against the bank under 11 U.S.C. § 506(c), and the environmental clean-up problems take precedent over Summit Trust’s position as a secured creditor.

This motion, and the objections thereto, raise issues concerning the administration of the debtor’s estate, allowance or disal-lowance of claims against the estate, avoidance of preferential transfers, the determination of the validity, extent, or priority of a lien, and other issues relating to the sale of property of the estate or liquidation of the estate’s assets, all of which are core proceedings under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2). This opinion constitutes the final order of this court, inclusive of findings of fact and conclusions of law.

Initially, the court notes that the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection withdrew its claim to the funds at issue here at the continued hearing on this matter. It appears, from the representation made by the DEP, that the clean-up of two of the debtor’s sites is complete, and the Department had made no indication that any clean-up of the third is necessary.

The landlords, however, assert that the environmental problems are not moot, as they paid for the clean-up which led to the Department’s decision to withdraw its claim to the funds. The landlords assert they should be permitted an administrative allowance roughly equivalent to the amounts spent to accomplish the clean-up, which they contend was the debtor’s responsibility. The final party in interest, the trustee for the debtor, recommended that the funds be transferred to the bank on the condition that the trustee’s rights to bring an action against the bank under 11 U.S.C. § 547 were preserved, as well as the trustee’s right to assert claims for preserving collateral of a creditor under § 506(c).

The landlords argue that Summit Trust Company is an insider, or potential insider, of the debtor such that the security interest granted by the debtor to Summit in the amount of $600,000.00 may be set aside as a preferential transfer. If this is true, the bank has no secured status granting it priority over other creditors with respect to payment from proceeds of the sale of the personal property of the debtor. Although the landlords state that it is imperative the issues relating to the potential insider status of Summit Trust Company and avoidability of liens be decided prior to turn over of funds from sale to Summit Trust Com *33 pany, this court notes that the appointment of the chapter 7 trustee has created a duty upon that trustee to-investigate transfers of any interest in the property of the debt- or or obligations incurred by the debtor.

The debtor and Summit Trust Company both vehemently object to the characterization of the extension of credit to the debtor as a preferential transfer and assert that the bank cannot qualify as an insider under § 101(30), without which qualification any such alleged insider preference must fail.

The trustee is charged with the duty and obligation of investigating this transfer, among others, and bringing whatever actions he, in his best judgment, deems to be beneficial to the estate (§ 707).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 B.R. 30, 33 ERC (BNA) 1165, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 2854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-synfax-manufacturing-inc-njb-1990.