In the Matter of Charles B. DREWRY and Julie M. Drewry, Debtors-Appellants

966 F.2d 236, 141 B.R. 236, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 14430, 1992 WL 140828
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 24, 1992
Docket91-1372
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 966 F.2d 236 (In the Matter of Charles B. DREWRY and Julie M. Drewry, Debtors-Appellants) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of Charles B. DREWRY and Julie M. Drewry, Debtors-Appellants, 966 F.2d 236, 141 B.R. 236, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 14430, 1992 WL 140828 (7th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

HARLINGTON WOOD, Jr., Senior Circuit Judge.

On March 6, 1985, Charles and Martha Drewry filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition. The Drewrys owned as tenants in common with Maurice and Inell Busselberg a tract of farmland in Indiana. After the petition was filed and before the bankruptcy court abandoned the Drewrys’ interest in the farmland in 1989, Maurice Bussel-berg collected rents on the farmland. Bus-selberg collected these rents for the 1985, 1986 and 1987 crop years. The sole issue on appeal is whether the United States Bankruptcy Court and the United States District' Court correctly found that the Drewrys, the Debtors, failed to carry their burden of proof on an 11 U.S.C. § 542 1 claim to the postpetition rents Maurice Busselberg collected. We affirm.

BACKGROUND FACTS

This appeal revolves around 966 acres of farmland known as Sunnybrook Farm in Lake County, Indiana. Maurice Bussel-berg began renting Sunnybrook Farm in 1946. In September 1974, Busselberg asked his friend Charles Drewry and Charles’s wife, Martha, if they were interested in purchasing Sunnybrook Farm with him and his wife, Inell. The Drewrys and Busselbergs agreed to purchase Sunny-brook Farm. On the day of the purchase, each couple paid $100,000 in cash and took out a joint mortgage for the balance, $635,-000, from the Federal Land Bank of Louisville (“Federal Land Bank”). The Drewrys and the Busselbergs pledged the 966 acres as security for their debt. The mortgage was recorded on January 3, 1974.

*238 The Drewrys and the Busselbergs held Sunnybrook Farm as tenants in common, but each couple individually held their undivided one-half interest in the farm as joint tenants with the right of survivorship in spouses. After the purchase, the Bussel-bergs continued to farm the land. The Drewrys paid one-fourth of all farming expenses and received one-fourth of all profits from the farming. The Drewrys and the Busselbergs agreed to split equally the costs of any improvements. This agreement between the parties was oral.

Well before purchasing Sunnybrook Farm with the Busselbergs, the Drewrys entered into a trust with Bank of Indiana, now Bank One. Trust No. 5747 provided that Bank One as trustee was to pay the net income of the trust estate to the grant- or, Charles Drewry, as directed in writing during Charles Drewry’s lifetime. By January 1, 1983, the Drewrys had placed their undivided one-half interest in Sunnybrook Farm in Trust No. 5747.

On December 28, 1982, the Drewrys, the Busselbergs and Bank One as trustee of Trust No. 5747, executed an agreement which stated the remaining balance on the Federal Land Bank mortgage to be $443,-865.73. The agreement was executed in order to establish the parties’ equity in Sunnybrook Farm and to permit the Bus-selbergs to prepay their portion of the mortgage. The agreement stated that the Busselbergs would retain a security interest in the property, in addition to their ownership interest. Unfortunately, as it will be seen, the Busselbergs failed to record this security interest. The agreement also granted the Busselbergs the right to pay off the portion of liability owed by the defaulting parties following an appraisal of the property in the event of a default by the Drewrys. The Busselbergs’ equitable interest would then be increased by an amount equal to that paid, while the defaulting parties’ equity would be decreased in the same amount. Finally, the agreement provided that if the Busselbergs assumed the Drewrys’ liability under the Federal Land Bank mortgage due to the Drewrys’ default, the Drewrys would assign 100% of their beneficial interest in Trust No. 5747 to the Busselbergs. Subsequent to this agreement, the Drewrys were to make all remaining payments due to the Federal Land Bank on the mortgage.

After entering into this agreement with the Busselbergs, the Drewrys, on July 8, 1983, established a land trust No. 1788 in the First Bank of Whiting (“Whiting Bank”). Trust No. 1788 provided the Drewrys owned a 100% beneficial interest in the trust. Under the trust agreement, Whiting Bank had the duty to (1) hold the title to the trust property until directed to convey it or until divested of title; (2) follow the directives of the beneficiaries; (3) forward or give notice of all legal documentation and other information concerning or affecting the property; and (4) execute and transmit all deeds, mortgages, notes, options, easements, leases and other instruments relating to or affecting the property upon receiving the directive of the beneficiary or other authorized person. The Drewrys then transferred their undivided one-half interest in Sunnybrook Farm, which was in Bank One Trust No. 5747, to Whiting Bank as trustee for Trust No. 1788. Finally, on July 8, 1983, the Drew-rys assigned their 100% beneficial interest from Trust No. 1788 to Whiting Bank to serve as collateral for over three million dollars in loans. On August 17, 1983, and August 30, 1983, Whiting Bank filed documents perfecting its security interest. On October 4, 1983, Bank One issued a Trustee’s Deed in favor of Whiting Bank as trustee under Trust No. 1788 releasing and quitclaiming to Whiting Bank all property held in Trust No. 5747.

Without notifying the owner of the undivided one-half interest, Whiting Bank, the Drewrys entered into a farm lease of their undivided one-half beneficial interest in Sunnybrook Farm with Busselberg Farms, Incorporated (“BFI”) as lessee on September 1, 1984. BFI at that time was a corporation with Paul Busselberg, Maurice’s son, and Paul's wife as the sole shareholders. Under the terms of the lease, the Drewrys leased their share of Sunnybrook Farm to BFI for three years with the right of renewal for five successive three-year terms. *239 Rent each year was $105.00 per tillable acre. The parties agree that 916 of the 966 acres in Sunnybrook Farm are tillable, so the Drewrys’ share was 458 acres. The lease agreement also provides the Drewrys would pay the real estate taxes on their half of the estate. BFI gave Charles Drewry a $20,000 rent prepayment, which was to be credited towards rent due in 1985. Also on September 1, 1984, Maurice Busselberg orally leased the remaining one-half divided interest in Sunnybrook Farm to BFI for an annual rent of $65.00 per tillable acre. The rents collected by Maurice Busselberg from BFI during this three-year period, 1985, 1986, and 1987, are at issue in this appeal.

Before the November 1984 real estate tax payment on Sunnybrook Farm was due, Drewry told Maurice Busselberg that he could not pay the taxes due. Busselberg paid the taxes in order to avoid tax foreclosure on the property. After Busselberg paid the tax installment, Drewry again approached Busselberg and told him he could not pay the Federal Land Bank mortgage payment which was due on December 29, 1984. Maurice Busselberg told Drewry that he would “take care of it,” and on January 2, 1985, Maurice Busselberg paid off the entire remaining balance on the Federal Land Bank mortgage. Busselberg paid over $188,000 even though the payment due was only $61,000. Federal Land Bank released the mortgage on Sunny-brook Farm on January 15, 1985.

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966 F.2d 236, 141 B.R. 236, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 14430, 1992 WL 140828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-charles-b-drewry-and-julie-m-drewry-debtors-appellants-ca7-1992.