In Re Taylor Freezers of Alabama, Inc.

115 B.R. 333, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 1273, 1990 WL 80864
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedMay 4, 1990
Docket19-00449
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 115 B.R. 333 (In Re Taylor Freezers of Alabama, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Taylor Freezers of Alabama, Inc., 115 B.R. 333, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 1273, 1990 WL 80864 (Ala. 1990).

Opinion

CONCLUSIONS BY THE COURT AND ORDER ON JOINT MOTION OF DEBTOR AND TAYLOR COMPANY

L. CHANDLER WATSON, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

In the above-styled chapter 11 bankruptcy case, Taylor Freezers of Alabama, Inc., the debtor, and Taylor Company filed a joint motion to have the Court: (1) “approve compromise”; and (2) “accept exec-utory contract as modified.” Notice of this motion to parties in interest was given by the debtor pursuant to its motion “to shorten time,” which was granted April 10, 1990. No objection to the motion was filed within ten days from the date of service of the notice (April 11, 1990) — the time stated in the notice; and the motion is now before the Court for a ruling.

The motion incorporates a “new” agreement between the debtor and Taylor Company, dated March 30,1990 (copy attached). The agreement would obligate the debtor to seek to have this Court waive specified provisions of title 11, United States Code, as to future defaults by the debtor and other events which may occur and to place its imprimatur of approval upon the “new” contract. The new contract would replace a prepetition distributor or area-dealer type of arrangement between the debtor and Taylor Company (copy Taylor-Freezers letter dated April 29, 1980, attached).

The parties refer to the “original exec-utory contract” between the parties, and the motion (in part) seeks to have the Court allow the debtor to assume “the original executory contract ... as modified.” The “new” agreement, however, does not appear to trigger any flow of legal or equitable power of the Court and is mainly an effort to establish priority over other creditors for payment of the prepetition debts owed to Taylor Company, while exempting it from the stay provided by 11 U.S.C. *335 § 362(a) and from any recovery of postpetition transfers under 11 U.S.C. § 549(a).

In fact, the “new” agreement would obligate the debtor to obtain the Court’s blessing of postpetition payments which (it may be inferred) the debtor has already made to this creditor upon a postpetition debt of $34,000, reducing it to $22,789.41.

The request to the Court cannot be granted as “the approval of a compromise,” as contemplated in Bankruptcy Rule 9019, because there is no controversy, although the motion seems to suggest that this is the type of request which is being made to the Court. (See motion title.)

As to the alternative request in the prayer — that the Court “enter an order immediately terminating the original executory contract” — this request is moot. The debt- or and Taylor Company have erased the old arrangement and written a new one in its place.

If the joint motion and the “new” agreement were to be taken as the debtor’s effort to assume an executory contract, it must be assumed from the substantial provisions for paying the prepetition debt that the prepetition contract or arrangement between the debtor and Taylor Company included the sale to the debtor of parts and equipment on credit. If the “new” agreement then amounts to no more than a means of “curing” a prepetition default, as would be required by the provisions of 11 U.S.C. § 365(b)(1)(A), the apparent ban on assumption found in subsection (c)(2) must be disregarded. That provision is that the debtor “may not assume ... an executory contract ... if ... such contract is a contract to make a loan, or extend other debt financing or financial accommodations, to or for the benefit of the debtor....”

In I Norton, Bankruptcy Law & Practice § 23.08.60, however, it is suggested that the “legislative history” shows that this ban was not intended to be applied to credit-sales contracts, because an express ban on assumption of this type of exec-utory contract was omitted from the final draft of the statute. To the Court, this omission can best be explained otherwise. It appears that the express language was unnecessary because the general language was sufficient to include this type of contract. All of that, however, is a futile inquiry. The statutory language is not ambiguous, and the “legislative history” is irrelevant. Thus, even if the “new” agreement, despite its “cash on the barrel head” language, were considered an assumption of the old credit arrangement, the debtor’s assumption of the prepetition arrangement is banned by 11 U.S.C. § 365(c)(2).

While the wording of the motion does not commend it for granting, it might be argued that counsels’ efforts should be salvaged by treating it as a request — under 11 U.S.C. § 364(b) — that the debtor be authorized to obtain or incur unsecured credit or debt, allowable as an administrative expense under 11 U.S.C. § 503(b)(1). The new agreement, however, forecloses this possibility by calling for the debtor to “pay cash-in-advance ... for all parts and equipment purchased from Taylor [company].”

The “new” contract recites that, in June, 1989, because of its defaults in payments, the debtor “agreed that Taylor would sell to [the debtor] only on a cash-in-advance basis.” From this, it appears that the old credit arrangement was gone, long before the chapter 11 bankruptcy petition was filed on November 1, 1989.

There was no evidence offered to support an affirmative finding on a “business judgment test,” 1 even if the Court could construe this matter as a proceeding to assume an executory contract. Support for such a finding would have to be found from the face of the “new” agreement. While it recites that it is necessary to the debtor’s business because a bank has ceased financing purchases by the debtor, the “new” agreement does not obligate the Taylor Company to provide financing for the debt- or’s purchases — just the opposite! The “new” agreement hardly binds Taylor Company to anything but gives it the right to *336 appoint competitors in the debtor’s territory-

If the “new” agreement were “approved” by the Court and the case were converted to one under chapter 7, the pre-petition debt to Taylor Company would have been paid or any unpaid balance would have been converted into a priority administrative expense under section 503(b) of the bankruptcy statute. 2 The fattening of the creditor at the expense of the fasting of the other creditors hardly stirs enthusiastic support by the Court for this endeav- or. The same may be said for its other facets which would require the debtor to “take a dive” with regard to various provisions of the bankruptcy law.

No sufficient cause for granting any relief upon the motion appearing, it is ORDERED by the Court that the motion is denied.

EXHIBIT A

Taylor® Freezer

Rockton, Illinois 61072

(815) 624-8333

April 29, 1980

Mr. Thomas M. Crumley

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Bluebook (online)
115 B.R. 333, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 1273, 1990 WL 80864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-taylor-freezers-of-alabama-inc-alnb-1990.