In re Terry Properties, LLC

569 B.R. 76, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 1873
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedJuly 6, 2017
DocketCASE NO. 16-71449
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 569 B.R. 76 (In re Terry Properties, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Terry Properties, LLC, 569 B.R. 76, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 1873 (Va. 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Paul M. Black, United States Bankruptcy Judge

This matter comes before the Court on the Amended Chapter 12 Plan of Reorganization (“Amended Plan”) of the Debtor, Terry Properties, LLC (the “Debtor”), and the objections thereto filed by Farm Credit of the Virginias, ACA (“Farm Credit”), Southern States Marion Cooperative, Inc. (“Southern States”), and the Chapter 12 Trustee (the “Trustee”). A trial was conducted on these matters on June 15-16, 2017.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

At issue in this case is a roughly 677-acre farming operation in Rural Retreat, Virginia, with portions of the farm in Smyth and Wythe counties.1 Ernest Ep-person Terry (“E.E. Terry”) acquired the farm in the Fall of 1969. E.E. Terry and his family operated the Cedar Springs Dairy on the farm up until his death in 2007. Following E.E. Terry’s death, the farm was conveyed to a testamentary trust (the “Trust”). E.E. Terry’s son David Terry, daughter Linda Terry Ruble, and grandson Jacob Terry2 served as trustees of the Trust. The Terry family continued to operate the dairy farm through the Trust from the time of E.E. Terry’s death until 2015. According to the testimony of David Terry, the duration of the Trust was limited to ten (10) years. In the Fall of 2015, the trustees decided to disburse the assets of the Trust into two newly-formed limited liability companies: Terry Dairy LLC (“Terry Dairy”) and the Debtor. Terry Dairy took title to all of the personal property held by the Trust and the Debtor took title to all of the real property. At some point in time, David Terry conveyed an interest he had in real estate adjoining the farm to Linda Terry Ruble in exchange for her 1/3 interest in the dairy. As of today, the members of Terry Dairy and the Debtor are David Terry, who holds a 2/3 interest, and Jacob Terry, who holds a 1/3 interest.

David Terry testified that Farm Credit’s involvement with the Terry family dates back 47 years. In October of 2015, Farm Credit entered into a Loan Restructure Agreement (“Restructure Agreement”) with David and Jacob Terry, as trustees of the Trust; David Terry, Jason Terry, Jacob Terry, and Levi Terry, each individually; Terry Dairy; and the Debtor, all as co-borrowers. Under the terms of this Restructure Agreement and a corresponding Deed of Assumption, the Debtor took title to the Trust real estate and assumed liability'for five Notes held by Farm Credit [79]*79jointly and severally with the other borrowers. Three of these Notes were secured by Credit Line Deeds of Trust (“CLDOTs”) against the Debtor’s real estate. By the terms of the Restructure Agreement, the total balance due on all loans matured on August 1, 2016. The total balance due to Farm Credit under the Notes is $2,663,729.73, including principal, interest, legal fees, and other charges. Of that debt, $2,100,437.27 is secured by the three CLDOTs.3 See Farm Credit Ex. 8.

At the time the parties entered into the Restructure Agreement, the Terry family contemplated remaining in the dairy business. Newly-formed Terry Dairy sought assistance from the Farm Service Agency to expand its herd of dairy cows from roughly 250 to 500 head. In addition, Terry Dairy constructed two new bams and a new commodity shed. By the Spring of 2016, however, dairy prices dropped drastically. According to the testimony of David Terry, the dairy business was losing $30,000.00 per month at that time. The Terry family made the decision in March of 2016 that if dairy prices remained low, they would have to get out of the dairy business altogether.

It was around this time that the Terry family was approached by Branch Botani-cals, Inc. (“Branch Botanicals”).4 Branch Botanicals is a start-up company that is seeking to develop a market for products such as flavorings, preservatives, anti-mi-crobials, fungicides, and pesticides created from oils derived from a specific species of cherry plant. Through discussions with the Virginia Department of Agriculture and the Virginia Tech Extension Service, Branch Botanicals made the decision to locate a processing facility for the cherry plants in Wythe County. These particular cherry plants are not harvested for their fruit. Rather, the plants are grown as a row crop, planted with a tobacco planter. The plants are harvested close to the ground annually, which ensures that the plants more resemble bushes than trees. When the entire plant is harvested each year, the number of shoots stemming from each root ball increases. Branch Botanicals estimates that growing the plants in this manner will yield about 10-12 tons of biomass per acre.5 This process has been tested at farms in Oregon, but the operation in Wythe County is Branch Botani-cals’s first endeavor to grow and process these plants at a commercial scale.

Branch Botanicals approached the Terry family in the Spring of 2016 about the possibility of entering into an agreement to grow these cherry plants. After a few months of negotiations, the Debtor and [80]*80Branch Botanicals entered into a contract on June 29, 2016 by which Branch Botani-cals agreed to finance a large portion of the start-up costs to convert the Terry farm from a dairy into a cherry plant farm through guaranteed payments for the first three years of growing. After the initial start-up period, the Debtor will be paid per pound of biomass produced. David and Levi Terry testified that they entered into this agreement because the guaranteed nature of the payments from Branch Botani-cals for the first three years reduced the market risk facing them in the dairy business. In addition, they testified that the money they receive each month from Branch Botanicals exceeds what they could make if they were to remain a dairy.

After entering into the contract with Branch Botanicals, the Terrys approached Farm Credit to seek an agreement whereby the existing loans would be re-amortized over a period of 20 years as each of the five outstanding Farm Credit loans matured on August 1, 2016. Representatives of Farm Credit, Branch Botanicals, and the Terrys met in September of 2016 on the Terry farm to allow Farm Credit to hear Branch Botanicals’s pitch and take notice of the steps already taken to implement the cherry growing contract. While the parties engaged in negotiations of a possible second loan restructure, ultimately no agreement was reached to re-amortize the debt. This prompted the Debtor to file its petition under Chapter 12 of the Bankruptcy Code on November 2, 2016.

The Debtor and several members of the Terry family were also involved in two state court lawsuits at that time. The first, according to Southern States,6 is a lawsuit filed by Southern States pending before the Circuit Court of Wythe County, Virginia originally against the Debtor, Levi Terry, Jason Terry, and Terry Dairy. Counsel for Southern States has represented to the Court that this is an action to recover upon a claim for $103,321.55 of unsecured debt arising from the purchase of goods and services on an account previously held by the Trust. An Order nonsuit-ing the Debtor from this action was entered in March of 2017. The second state court lawsuit is an action filed by Farm Credit against Terry Dairy, David Wilmer Terry, Jacob Jerome Terry, Jason B. Terry, and Levi Ernest Terry in the Circuit Court of Smyth County, Virginia seeking a Judgment in Detinue so that it can repossess and sell certain personal property collateral. The Debtor was not named as a defendant in this action, although it is a co-borrower on the Notes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
569 B.R. 76, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 1873, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-terry-properties-llc-vawb-2017.