In re VPH Pharmacy, Inc.

578 B.R. 776
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedDecember 8, 2017
DocketCase No. 17-30077-dof
StatusPublished

This text of 578 B.R. 776 (In re VPH Pharmacy, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re VPH Pharmacy, Inc., 578 B.R. 776 (Mich. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION GRANTING MOTION OF H.D. SMITH. LLC FOR ALLOWANCE AND PAYMENT OF SECTION 503(b)(9) ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSE CLAIM

Hon. Daniel S. Opperman

Findings of Fact

VPH Pharmacy, Inc. operated a closed-door pharmacy supplying various nursing homes, adult centers, and assisted living facilities with medical supplies and drugs. In order to do so, VPH relied upon suppliers, such as H.D. Smith Wholesale Drug Company (“H.D. Smith”) to provide the necessary materials. There was a long standing arrangement between VPH and H.D. Smith to supply these materials. This relationship continued after the Debtor filed its Chapter 11 petition with this Court on January 13, 2017. H.D. Smith continued this process for at least 20 days and then noted that it had not been paid by VPH. Accordingly, H.D. Smith filed a Motion for Allowance and Payment of Section 503(b)(9) Administrative Expense Claim on May 10, 2017 (“Motion”) seeking Section 503(b)(9) status for goods totaling $282,265,10. Thereafter, the Debtor converted to Chapter 7 and the Chapter 7 Trustee filed an Objection to the Motion on September 22, 2017 claiming that H.D. Smith has not shown delivery of the goods in question. On September 26, 2017 H.D. Smith filed a Supplemental Motion attaching approximately 200 pages.

At the October 4, 2017 hearing, counsel for H.D. Smith detailed the method the Court should follow to confirm the delivery and receipt of the various materials. As detailed by counsel, the truck shipment manifest details various bar code numbers, which in turn link to packing slips which contain item numbers and carton numbers delivered to VPH at its 5376 Miller Road facility. Also, the routed order sheet noted a signature acknowledging delivery and receipt of the items. The Affidavit of Ron Castaldo of United Delivery Service (“UDS”) confirms the delivery of these goods and the Affidavit of Dan Howard of H.D. Smith also confirms delivery of these goods. As stated in the Supplemental Motion, all but $1,278.70 of the goods mentioned in the original Motion were delivered to the Debtor 20 days before the petition date. Also attached to the Supplemental Motion is the email of Debtor’s Chapter 11 counsel which states: “John, we have reviewed your motion for Section 503(b)(9) administrative expense claims and agree that the amounts are correct. The Debtor at this point does not have the funds to pay. We are open to a resolution of this matter. Do you have a suggestion regarding how to proceed?”

In response, the Trustee argued that although delivery of the goods may have been made to the Debtor, H.D. Smith failed to show receipt of the goods. At the end of the hearing, the Court allowed H.D. Smith the opportunity to supplement the record.

After the October 4, 2017 hearing, H.D. Smith submitted the Affidavit of Robert Denta, the Distribution Center Manager for H.D. Smith. This Affidavit, along with the Affidavits of Mr. Castaldo and Mr. Howard attached to H.D. Smith’s Supplemental Motion filed on September 26, 2017, show that the goods in issue here are controlled substances subject to very strict control such that the delivery of the products in question must have been received by VPH. Also, the Affidavits make it clear that H.D. Smith has attempted to confirm receipt of these products by contacting former employees of VPH, but that these efforts are stalled by the reluctance of these individuals to testify.

In particular, each Affidavit detailed the process that these goods are handled, shipped, delivered, and received. Mr. Den-ta stated in his Affidavit:

5. H.D. Smith is a distributor as that term is defined by the Code of Federal Regulations and therefore must comply with applicable federal statutes and regulations when delivering controlled substances to its customers.
6. Federal statutes and regulations require that delivery of controlled substances be made only to the purchaser of the products at the location designated by the purchaser and requires H.D. Smith as a distributor, to maintain records, which include the date and quantity of each shipment and the name, address and federal registration number of each person to whom a shipment was made. See 21 U.S.C. §§ 801, et seq. and 21 CFR 1301, et seq.
7. Many of the products which H.D. Smith sold and delivered to VPH Pharmacy, Inc. (“VPH”) prior to February 2015 were controlled substances as defined by federal statute.
8. As a result, H.D. Smith complied with the legal requirements for delivery and record keeping of controlled substances for each and every delivery made to VPH, whether or not a particular delivery included controlled substances as defined by the federal statute.
9.Out of an abundance of caution, H.D. Smith continued to comply with the legal requirements for the delivery and record keeping of controlled substances for all goods sold to VPH after January 2015, as if the goods were defined as controlled substances under federal law.
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18. The only products which H.D. Smith had delivered to the address designated by VPH, as set forth in Exhibits A and B, were products sold by H.D. Smith to VPH.
19. No products sold to VPH by H.D. Smith were delivered to an entity other than VPH.
20. All products sold by H.D. Smith to VPH were delivered to VPH at the address it designated pursuant to federal law.
21. No products sold by H.D. Smith to entities other than VPH were delivered to the address designated by VPH.
22. As reflected on the exhibits to H.D. Smith’s Supplemental Motion for Allowance of Section 503(b)(9) Administrative Expense Claim, which was filed with this Court on September 26, 2017, all products delivered to VPH within twenty (20) days before VPH’s bankruptcy filing were delivered to VPH at the address VPH designated pursuant to federal statute.
23. All products received by VPH from H.D. Smith within twenty (20) days before VPH’s bankruptcy filing were sold to VPH in the ordinary course of VPH’s business. -

The delivery address referenced by Mr. Denta is 5376 Miller Road, Swartz Creek, Michigan 48473, as confirmed by the DEA Registration Validation Result of the U.S. Department of Justice, Drug Enforcement' Administration, Office of Diversion Control and the State of Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs,

The earlier Affidavit of Mr. Castaldo detailed the delivery of H.D. Smith’s goods to the Debtor at 5376 Miller Road. The attachments to his Affidavit, as well as that of Mr. Howard, evidence the delivery of the goods to 5376 Miller Road, as well as acknowledgment of receipt of those goods by various individuals. As the Second Supplement to the Motion states, H.D. Smith has identified those individuals as Sanjay Jain, Alex Irwin, Fernando Salis, and Dwane Carthion.

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Related

In Re Momenta, Inc.
2011 BNH 10 (D. New Hampshire, 2011)
In Re World Imports, Ltd.
862 F.3d 338 (Third Circuit, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
578 B.R. 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-vph-pharmacy-inc-mieb-2017.