In Re Westcamp

78 B.R. 834, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 1543
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedMay 1, 1987
DocketBankruptcy 2-87-00931
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 78 B.R. 834 (In Re Westcamp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Westcamp, 78 B.R. 834, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 1543 (Ohio 1987).

Opinion

ORDER GRANTING DEBTOR’S MOTION FOR AUTHORITY TO USE CASH COLLATERAL UPON GRANT OF ADEQUATE PROTECTION

R.G. COLE, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter is before the Court on the debtor’s motion for authority to use cash collateral upon a grant of adequate protection. The United States of America, acting through the Farmers Home Administration (“FmHA”), filed an opposition to the debt- or’s motion. A hearing on the motion and opposition thereto was held on April 23, 1987.

The Court observes, preliminarily, that the motion is not accompanied by a supporting memorandum of law containing a brief statement of the grounds with a citation of authorities relied upon by debtor, as required by the Local Rules of the District Court. While our local rules impose no similar requirement on parties opposing motions, it certainly is helpful to the Court when such memoranda contain reasons supporting the opposition instead of a terse and uninformative statement such as is found in FmHA’s memorandum.

Statement of Facts

The testimony and evidence before the Court discloses that the debtor is a family farmer who filed his petition for relief under Chapter 12 on March 6, 1987. FmHA was listed on Schedule A-2 as the holder of a claim in the amount of $576,588.73, secured by certain real estate, farm machín- *835 ery and equipment, and crops. Debtor’s 58.84-acre farmland, on which FmHA has a junior lien, is subject to the senior lien of Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, whose claim of approximately $91,000 exceeds the $75,000 fair market value of said real property. The farm machinery and equipment, on which FmHA has a first and best lien, is valued at $50,000. FmHA has a lien on real property owned by the debt- or’s wife as security for its claim, but debt- or has no interest in that land. Finally, the debtor possesses four checks totaling $55,-242.15, described below, which represent the proceeds from the sale of debtor’s 1986 soybean and corn crop, and which constitute cash collateral in which FmHA has an interest:

Payee Date Amount (kop
Donald Westcamp & FmHA 10/20/86 $12,728.66 soybean
Donald Westcamp & FmHA 11/04/86 $15,819.72 soybean
Donald Westcamp & FmHA 11/25/86 $25,031.87 corn
Donald Westcamp & FmHA 12/04/86 $ 1,661.90
TOTAL $55,242.15

No other claimant has an interest in the foregoing cash collateral.

Debtor, by his motion, requests this Court’s approval to use the entire sum of $55,242.15 for the purchase of fertilizer, seed, and chemicals, and for other expenses which will be incurred in planting a crop in 1987. Debtor has been unsuccessful in his attempts to borrow money from lending institutions or from FmHA as operating capital for the 1987 farming season; has had his requests for the purchase on credit of crop inputs denied by his trade creditors; and requires the entire $55,242.15, in addition to a government subsidy check of approximately $12,000, to complete planting operations in the spring of 1987.

Debtor’s crop consists of wheat, sweetcorn and corn, and soybeans. He has projected cash farm receipts in 1987 of $225,465 from the following sources:

Wheat and soybeans $ 69,100
Com and sweetcom $ 76,825
Hay and straw $ 6,500
Cattle $ 7,500
Custom trucking $ 12,000
Government program $ 46,340
Custom hog feeding 7,200
$225,465

He has projected personal and farm expenditures of $166,536, leaving a projected profit of $58,929. Debtor’s past projections, submitted to FmHA each year since about 1981, evidence a continuing inability to reduce the FmHA debt and a higher-than-average cost of operation. Debtor admits that the vagaries associated with farming have resulted in somewhat disappointing profit margins in past years, but is optimistic that his restructured operations have positioned him to have a good crop year in 1987.

Debtor has been a farmer since 1950. For 1987, he has made adjustments in his farming operations and selective changes in the land which will be farmed. His 1987 farming operations, for the most part, will be conducted “on the shares,” which simply means he will share harvest proceeds with the owner of the land. Debtor’s testimony concerning projected income from his share of proceeds on sweetcom, com, soybeans and wheat was essentially unchallenged by FmHA. Debtor’s projections are as follows:

*836 Crop Acres Per Debtor’s Share Bushels/Acre Price Income
Corn 500/352 110 bu./acre $1.70/bu.
Sweetcom —/14 800-1100 doz. per acre $1.50-1.20 per acre $11,000
Soybean 492/328 35 bu./acre $5.00/bu. $57,400
Wheat 116/100 50 bu./acre $2.40/bu. $12,000

Debtor projects income of $12,000 from custom trucking and $7,200 from custom hog feeding. 1 Debtor also anticipates income of $46,340 pursuant to some unde-scribed government program, an item of income which was unchallenged by FmHA.

Debtor offered the following at the hearing as adequate protection for FmHA’s interest in the aforementioned cash collateral:

1. Debtor will grant FmHA a first and best lien of crops yet to be planted, grown or harvested in 1987, and proceeds thereof, whose estimated value is $160,583;
2. Debtor will not grant any other person or entity any lien on 1987 crops or proceeds thereof, nor will debtor permit any “production lien” to attach to 1987 crops or crop proceeds;
3. Debtor will repay FmHA, with interest at the rate of 4.50% per annum, immediately upon harvesting and sale of 1987 crops, and in no event later than November, 1987;
4. Debtor has purchased, and will maintain in full force and effect, multi-peril crop insurance as protection against all hazards and catastrophes typically covered by federal crop insurance; and
5. Debtor will assign FmHA its entitlement to receipt of deficiency payments pursuant to an Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service (“ASCS”) program, covering any deficiency in price, which payments have an estimated value of $24,-220.86.

On April 24,1987, debtor filed an Amended Offer of Adequate Protection to Farmers Home Administration. The amended offer simply memorializes the offer as made at the hearing and attaches a specimen copy of debtor’s multi-peril insurance policy.

Conclusions of Law

FmHA asserts that a lien on crops not yet in existence, that are speculative in nature, and that are subject to the uncertainties of weather and management, will not adequately protect its interest in the existing 1986 crop proceeds.

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Bluebook (online)
78 B.R. 834, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 1543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-westcamp-ohsb-1987.