In Re Tillotson

266 B.R. 565, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1148, 2001 WL 1095084
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York
DecidedApril 25, 2001
Docket2-19-20105
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 266 B.R. 565 (In Re Tillotson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Tillotson, 266 B.R. 565, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1148, 2001 WL 1095084 (N.Y. 2001).

Opinion

MICHAEL J. KAPLAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The question before the Court is so easy to state that it may deceive one into expecting an easy answer. The question is this: If a reorganization court’s finding that a Chapter 11 plan was “feasible” turns out to be so wrong that the plan not only fails, but, in addition, the value of what had been a fully-secured lender’s collateral has been substantially diminished, may that debtor foist that loss upon the lender by a serial filing that proposes a new plan that strips the secured claim down to the diminished value? Stated otherwise, may a second filing be employed to place the burden of that loss on the lender, or is such a debtor left forever without another chance to reorganize? The answer is that “objective good faith” is lacking in the second filing, at least at this time. Whether a different result would be reached had the losses occurred gradually over a longer period of time will await a proper case.

Here the Debtor is a dairy farmer who in an earlier Chapter 11 case had a plan confirmed in which he and the bank agreed that the bank’s $1.48 million claim was fully secured and that he could retire it at the rate of $17,000 per month. This was on the basis of careful projections and detailed planning between the farmer and the bank. The bank even extended a small amount of new money. The Debtor was to increase the size of his herd to a specified number to optimize milk production. Milk price fluctuations were predicted and averaged out; a conservatively low price was employed in the projections as the price of milk. Cull-rates were anticipated. All normal incidents of dairy farming in this region were considered and entered into the agreed calculations. Future borrowing (from the bank and from another source) for increasing the size of the herd was arranged and specified in the Plan.

No judicial determination of value of the farm was required.

The elements conspired against Debtor, however. Illness struck the herd, reducing income and increasing veterinary expenses. Heavier-than-normal snowfall collapsed a portion of the barn, further depressing the income, at least for a time. Milk prices fell, though not quite as low as the figure that was used in the plan computations. Regular spring “planting loans” that the Debtor used to get from others became unavailable, and he had to buy feed rather than grow it. The repairs to the collapsed barn turned out to be insufficient and the barn collapsed again. Rather than missing the scheduled payments to the bank, the Debtor, without the bank’s knowledge, used the insurance proceeds from the second barn collapse to make monthly mortgage payments to the bank, rather than repairing the barn.

All in all, even though the Debtor got the loans to buy cows, he was never able to get the herd size up to the number that the Plan required. Instead, it has declined. And with the damaged barn, the *567 Debtor could not provide for a larger herd even if he had more money to buy cows. With benefit of hindsight it can be said that the Plan simply was not feasible.

The payments that he made by use of the insurance proceeds were the last payments he made to the bank. The Debtor continued to make payments to other, much smaller creditors.

On the eve of a foreclosure sale and replevin of his herd, he filed this second Chapter 11 case. By both sides’ appraisals, the bank is now substantially underse-cured because the herd is dramatically smaller. The Debtor asserts that the portion of the loan that is secured by a mortgage on the farm remains fully secured, but that the portions of the loan secured by livestock, equipment, inventory and crops are now undersecured by nearly a half million dollars, perhaps more.

The Debtor’s new proposal is to pay the bank approximately $7,000 per month instead of the $17,000 per month that was provided for in the prior Chapter 11 plan. What had been a fully-secured claim of over $1.4 million to be fully paid over the course of twenty to twenty-five years 1 will become a stripped-down secured claim of only $870,000 to be fully paid over thirty years, with the balance allowed as an unsecured claim to be paid twenty cents on the dollar over the course of five years.

ISSUE

The bank has sought dismissal of this case claiming it was filed in bad faith, has sought lift of stay to permit its foreclosure and its replevin to continue, and has also reserved its right to object to the proposed Plan and to challenge its feasibility.

The policy issue is profound. The prior Chapter 11 plan was confirmed in February of 1998. If, in February of 1998, a lender is owed $1.4 million on a fully-secured basis, and pays no attention to actual conditions on its borrower’s farm until payments stop in the summer of the year 2000 and the borrower files a Chapter 11 petition and proves that the fates have devastated the value of the farm, there can be no doubt about the fact that it is the secured claim of the bank, not the borrower, that bears that loss of collateral value, assuming that all the other requisites to confirmation of a Chapter 11 plan are met. The lender’s secured claim is based on the value of the collateral as of the filing date, and the loss of value while the lender was not vigilant is of no moment, so long as the loss does not continue after the Chapter 11 filing.

That is not uniquely a “bankruptcy result.” That would be the result in a fair market value sale after foreclosure. The only “bankruptcy” feature is that the borrower may continue to own the property and to pay the bank over time, with a present-value factor added, and with the borrower having an obligation to pay the unsecured deficiency claim to the extent required by the Chapter 7 test. (Under non-bankruptcy law, a borrower might not have liability on the unsecured deficiency.)

But here, the bank had sought to foreclose back in 1996, when it was fully secured. That led to the Debtor’s first Chapter 11 filing. The bank was diligent in preserving and protecting its rights during the pendency of the Chapter 11 case. Recognizing the reality of what a debtor can accomplish under Chapter 11, the bank consented to a stretch-out, but on carefully negotiated terms to protect both the *568 bank’s security and its income stream from the Debtor. The process of Chapter 11 took about two years. For about two years after that the bank received payments. Apparently, the bank did not, however, inventory the herd or make other inspections to see if the Debtor was complying with aspects of the plan other than making the monthly payments to the bank. But when the payments stopped, the bank again diligently sought foreclosure upon the real property and replevin of the personal property. The new Chapter 11 filing came on the eve of replevin.

In the past five years, therefore, there have been only about 22 months that the Debtor has not been under the § 362 protection of this Court. And in those 22 months alone, the bank’s collateral dropped perhaps a third in value, now rendering the bank undersecured.

The Debtor’s argument is this: “I did nothing wrong. I suffered ill fortune that had not been contemplated during the course of my prior Chapter 11 proceeding. I am not trying to get a better deal to improve ‘profits.’ Rather, my family has owned this farm for over 100 years and I am trying to save it.

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Bluebook (online)
266 B.R. 565, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1148, 2001 WL 1095084, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-tillotson-nywb-2001.