In Re White Farm Equipment Co.

103 B.R. 177, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1182, 19 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1299, 1989 WL 83164
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJuly 11, 1989
Docket19-05297
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 103 B.R. 177 (In Re White Farm Equipment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re White Farm Equipment Co., 103 B.R. 177, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1182, 19 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1299, 1989 WL 83164 (Ill. 1989).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

JOHN D. SCHWARTZ, Chief Judge.

On September 4, 1980, White Farm Equipment Company (“WFE I”) filed a voluntary petition for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code 1 in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Ohio. On that date, *178 an order was entered authorizing the debt- or-in-possession to pay pre-petition wages and benefits up to $2,000 per employee for wages earned within the ninety days preceding the commencement of that case. The order directing these payments did not specifically authorize or direct the debtor-in-possession to withhold and pay the withholding and FICA taxes which would ordinarily have been paid to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) at or shortly after the time of the payment of the wages.

On or about May 12,1981, the IRS filed a Proof of Claim for these taxes pursuant to § 507(a)(6) (now and hereinafter referred to as § 507(a)(7)). The claim consisted of $339,921.80 for FICA and withholding and $13,493.01 for FUTA taxes together with interest and a penalty up to the filing date. Prior to confirmation of the Plan in WFE I, no payments on this claim were made by WFE I.

On October 31, 1981, the first amended Plan of reorganization of WFE I was confirmed. The Plan contemplated the continued operation of the business of the Debtor by the reorganized Debtor and provided that “[a]ll claims of government units entitled to priority under § 507(a)(6) [§ 507(a)(7)] shall receive deferred cash payments over a six-year period in equal annual installments commencing 90 days after confirmation of the Plan in accordance with the provisions of § 1129(a)(9)(C) of the Bankruptcy Code.” It is not clear from the briefs before the court whether any of the amount to be paid under the Plan was paid. It is however clear that most, if not all, was never paid.

On May 20, 1985, an involuntary petition under Chapter 7 was filed against the reorganized WFE I (“WFE II”) in the United States Bankruptcy Court in Kansas. This proceeding was transferred to this jurisdiction on June 5, 1985 and converted to a voluntary Chapter 11 case on June 14, 1985.

On September 17, 1986, the IRS filed Claim No. 1-17 in the WFE II case for the remaining taxes due to it under the WFE I Plan. The IRS asserts that Claim No. 1-17 is entitled to § 507(a)(7) priority status in the WFE II case. The WFE II Unsecured Creditors Committee (“Committee”) has filed an objection to Claim No. 1-17, arguing that the taxes due are not to be accorded a seventh priority under § 507(a)(7) in the WFE II case, but must be treated as general unsecured claims.

On November 5, 1987, this court entered an order confirming the Third Amended Plan in the WFE II case. This Plan is a plan of liquidation, providing that priority tax claims must be paid in full. The IRS contends that Claim No. 1-17 arose from nonpayment of the taxes from the WFE I case and is therefore a priority claim in this case. The Committee contends that the taxes due from WFE I have no priority in the WFE II case.

For the sake of clarity, the court wishes to emphasize that the claim in question in the WFE II case is for the same tax obligations asserted as the claim in the WFE I case § 507(a)(7). The question before the court, therefore, is whether the tax obligations to be paid as provided under § 1129(a)(9)(C) under the WFE I Plan have retained their seventh priority from the first case to the second case or have lost that priority. A secondary question is whether the interest on the tax obligations is also to be accorded priority status in the WFE II case.

The IRS argues that the priority of the claim for these tax obligations, which it calls trust fund taxes, is never lost through the passage of time. The IRS cites the language of § 507(a)(7)(C), which provides seventh priority for “a tax required to be collected or withheld and for which the debtor is liable in whatever capacity.” The IRS contends that the language “in whatever capacity”, combined with the legislative history of the sections according taxes seventh priority, must lead to the conclusion that the intervening event of a second bankruptcy filing has no effect on that priority in the second case. In other words, if the obligor is obligated in any possible capacity, it remains obligated through reorganization.

*179 The Committee argues that seventh priority has never been applied in back-to-baek Chapter 11 cases. The Committee reads the words “in whatever capacity” as limited to an attempt on the part of Congress to reach through the bankrupt corporation to the officers who had had responsibility for the collection of these taxes. The Committee urges the court to regard WFE II as not a continuation or repetition of WFE I, but as a new ease with a new debtor and different objectives. As such, the Committee contends, WFE II was not bound to fulfill the WFE I Plan of reorganization except to the extent that the Plan bound all holders of claims. In other words, the WFE I Plan was a contract with all holders of claims, including the IRS, and the failure to perform this obligation to the IRS under the Plan was no more than a breach of that contract. Thus the IRS can make only a general unsecured claim for breach of the obligation in the WFE II ease.

Neither party has brought to the court’s attention any authority or legislative history directly on point and the court has found none. The court is aware of its own precedent in In re Jartran, Inc., 71 B.R. 938 (Bankr.N.D.Ill.1987), aff’d, 87 B.R. 525 (N.D.Ill.1988) and In re Jartran, Inc., 76 B.R. 123 (Bkrtcy.N.D.Ill.1987). That case involved a situation similar to this in that a claim from a preceding case arose in a subsequent case. The argument was made, and rejected by this court, that the claim should retain its priority in the second case. In the first case, the court said:

... the court does not consider Jartran II as a continuation of Jartran I, but considers the two as separate cases characterized by different objectives, assets and claims ... In re Jartran, Inc., 71 B.R. at 941.

In the second case, the court said:

The provisions of a confirmed plan bind all parties whose rights are affected by the plan ... When, as here, substantial operations under a confirmed plan are followed by a second case, the entity s unpaid liabilities under the first case plan become general unsecured claims in the second case. In re Jartran, Inc., 76 B.R. at 125.

An administrative claim from the first bankruptcy was not allowed to retain its administrative priority in a second bankruptcy. In the court’s opinion, these decisions do not apply to the question of whether taxes lose their statutory priority in a second case. The court must decide on the basis of what Congress intended with respect to a continuing priority for taxes previously due from a predecessor entity.

The two White Farm cases are indeed separate cases with different objectives, assets and claims. That does not answer the question before the court because no contention has been made that WFE II owes the taxes as a result of its own tax obligation incurred after confirmation- of the WFE I Plan.

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103 B.R. 177, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1182, 19 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1299, 1989 WL 83164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-white-farm-equipment-co-ilnb-1989.