In Re Zachman Homes, Inc.

47 B.R. 496, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 4519
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedNovember 30, 1984
Docket18-43988
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 47 B.R. 496 (In Re Zachman Homes, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Zachman Homes, Inc., 47 B.R. 496, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 4519 (Minn. 1984).

Opinion

ORDER

MARGARET A. MAHONEY, Bankruptcy Judge.

A hearing was held before the undersigned on August 14, 15, 16, 17, 20 and 21 on Motion of the Mechanic’s Lien Committee in the above bankruptcy case to determine the validity, priority and extent of mechanic’s liens.

Facts

The Debtor, Zachman Homes, Inc., (Zach-man) is a developer/builder of residential housing units. Zachman filed for Chapter 11 protection on November 2, 1983. At the date of filing its bankruptcy petition, the Debtor had approximately 50 housing units in various stages of construction. To facilitate completion of these unfinished units, the Court established, via its order of December 29, 1983, and amended order of May 9, 1984, a procedure whereby the Debtor could complete and sell the housing units. The proceeds of sale of the units were first to be distributed to materialmen and laborers who provided work and materials after the date of the bankruptcy petition. Funds then were to go to the Debtor to cover its construction and selling costs. The remainder of the sale proceeds were deposited in an escrow fund for payment of pre-bankruptcy petition mechanic’s liens and other encumbrances.

This procedure established by the Court also provided that the construction lender (D.C. Bell and/or B.T. Investors, Inc.) would receive from the closing proceeds the balance owing the lender on its construction mortgage with the Debtor. This amount due the mortgagee, (the principal and interest to the date of the sale), was payable to the mortgagee subject to the proviso that the Court at a later date would determine the relative priority of the construction mortgage in relation to various prepetition mechanic’s lien holders.

For each housing unit sold, the Court’s order further provided that the mortgagee and the Debtor were to escrow a sum of money to be applied toward the construe *498 tion mortgagee’s attorney’s fees, to which the mortgagee claims an entitlement under the terms of its mortgage with the Debtor. The propriety of these fees was to be determined at a later date.

Several of the parties concerned filed standing 'objections to the procedure established by the Court in order to preserve their relative rights and to seek a final Court determination of the respective claims of the parties to the escrowed funds. The hearings held on the above dates dealt with several issues:

1. The relative priority of the construction mortgagee vis-a-vis the prepetition mechanic’s lienholders.

2. The issue of the amount and validity of Lyman Lumber liens.

3. As to each parcel, the validity of all liens.

4. As to each parcel, the relative priority of all liens vis-a-vis the construction mortgage.

The principal parties in this case reached an agreement whereby the hearings on the above-mentioned dates were intended to constitute sample cases to determine the relative rights of the parties and perhaps obviate the need for further extended hearings on the remaining parcels. To facilitate this, the parties agreed to have these four cases, represented by at least one closed housing unit in each of the Debtor’s four housing developments, heard by the Court. To that end, for purposes of this Order, each sample parcel will be treated separately.

First, however, it should be noted that certain facts have been stipulated to and applied to all four parcels. Those facts are the following:

1. Zachman Homes, Inc., was the owner of the land in each subdivision in question at all times relevant herein.

2. Zachman Homes was mortgagor on each construction loan at all relevant times.

3. Zachman and lender Bell agreed that Zachman would pay Bell’s attorney’s fees incurred by Bell in protecting and collecting its money and position under the construction loan mortgage.

4. Zachman contracted with each mechanic’s lien claimant to provide labor and materials for completion of the improvements on all premises either directly or through subcontractor Westwood Development.

5. Bell and B.T. properly perfected their construction mortgage loans on each subject parcel as of a certain date.

In order to achieve a better understanding of the general nature of Zach-man’s business, the process by which a subdivision is developed should be delineated.

1. Raw land is purchased by Zachman Homes.

2. The raw land is plotted into a subdivision by Westwood.

3. The setting of the grade stakes, surveying, and setting of boundary markers is done by Egan Field.

4. The rough grading operating performed by DLR subsequent to grade staking is done by Egan Field. DLR essentially first scrapes off all the topsoil from the land.

5. .At or about the time DLR performs its work, Subterranean Engineering performs soil testing and field density tests on the projected subdivision. Should certain soil be determined to be unacceptable for housing, said soil is removed and replaced by other fill which is to be later compacted.

6. Water mains, gas mains, and sanitary sewer lines are installed, usually beneath what will eventually become the road in the subdivision. Usually, as a part of the operation, the services are run to each individual lot on the sewer and water. The water service is usually marked by a curb stop and a metal fencepost. The curb stop is usually located 15 feet from the projected curbline of the street. One curbstop per lot is the usual modus operandi.

*499 7. The electrical conduit services are installed on each lot. The conduit service, which extends from the electrical main, is generally evidenced by approximately two feet of conduit protruding above the ground and staked with an iron fencepost.

8. The gas service is connected to each lot. The gas service is also marked by iron fenceposts.

9. After all the utility services have been run in, the street itself is installed.

Regardless of whether the street has been installed or is being worked on, Zach-man often started the house construction itself. Sometime prior to the actual erection of the structure itself, the actual physical boundaries of the house itself are staked and graded into a relatively flat area known as a house pad.

At or about the time the final utilities are being installed and the house pad has been installed, Zachman then goes to the construction mortgagee to obtain mortgaged funds for construction of the house. On the day the mortgage is to be recorded on each individual lot, Guarantee Title Company takes photographs of the projected housing lot. Apparently after the mortgage has been placed on the property, the exact corners of the building itself are staked out by Hedlund Engineering.

With those common facts in mind, examination of each individual parcel is appropriate.

Lake Eden East

(Mortgage filed June 6, 1983)

The sample property in Lake Eden East is a condominium building with five closed units.

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Related

Premier Bank v. BECKER DEVELOPMENT, LLC
785 N.W.2d 753 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2010)
R.B. Thompson, Jr. Lumber Co. v. Windsor Development Corp.
383 N.W.2d 362 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1986)
RB Thompson, Jr. Lumber v. Windsor Dev.
383 N.W.2d 357 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 B.R. 496, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 4519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-zachman-homes-inc-mnb-1984.