Integra Bank, N.A. v. Ross (In Re Ross)

270 B.R. 710, 2001 WL 1646419
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedDecember 7, 2001
Docket19-30041
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 270 B.R. 710 (Integra Bank, N.A. v. Ross (In Re Ross)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Integra Bank, N.A. v. Ross (In Re Ross), 270 B.R. 710, 2001 WL 1646419 (Ill. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

KENNETH J. MEYERS, Bankruptcy Judge.

Creditor, Integra Bank (“Bank”), filed a motion to dismiss the debtors’ Chapter 12 case, arguing that the debtors fail to qualify as “family farmers” eligible for Chapter 12 relief. See 11 U.S.C. § 101(18). Specifically, the Bank asserts that income the debtors received from the sale of land in the year prior to filing constitutes non-farm income which, when added to other non-farm income of the debtors, exceeds the limitation on non-farm income for persons seeking to file a Chapter 12 case. The debtors, in response, assert that the land sale proceeds are properly characterized as farm income and that they thus meet the 50 percent farm income test of § 101(18) for filing under Chapter 12.

Section § 109(f) of the Bankruptcy Code states that only a “family farmer with a regular annual income” may be a Chapter 12 debtor. See 11 U.S.C. § 109(f). Section 101(18) defines “family farmer” as an individual and spouse who, among other things,

receive from [a] farming operation more than 50 percent of [their] gross income for the taxable year preceding [the year in which the Chapter 12 case] was filed[.]

11 U.S.C. § 101(18) (emphasis added). At issue in this case is whether, in the year prior to filing, the debtors received more than 50 percent of their gross income from a farming operation so as to come within the Code’s definition of “family farmer.”

Debtors Ty and Sherri Ross filed their Chapter 12 case on July 9, 2001. 1 In their petition, they schedule real estate assets consisting of a “262-acre farm” and a 24-acre “real estate development.” They further disclose that in September and October 2000, they sold 18 acres of land to a golf course adjacent to their property. The debtors describe this transaction in their statement of financial affairs as a “sale of acreage from real estate development.”

The debtors’ tax return shows that in the year 2000, they received gross income of $19,579 from the sale of grain, cattle, and hay. (2000 Tax Rtn., Sched. F.) In addition, they received $46,169 in gross income from wages and salaries, interest income, and unemployment compensa *712 tion — the bulk of it from Ty Ross’s off-farm employment as a correctional officer for the Vienna Correctional Center. 2 (2000 Tax Ret., Form 1040.) In addition, the debtors received $92,996 in capital gains from the sale of 18 acres to the golf course. (2000 Tax Rtn., Sched. D.)

At hearing on the Bank’s motion to dismiss, debtor Ty Ross stated that prior to his employment at the Vienna Correctional Center, 3 he farmed with his father who lives nearby. He has never been a “full time farmer,” although he owns a tractor, two hay balers, and a hay conditioner and borrows any other equipment he might need from his father. He has owned the 18 acres in question for the past 12 years, during which time he has kept it in hay, except for the first two years when he planted it in corn. Ty Ross further stated that he plants 50 to 75 acres of grain every year “on the whole farm” and currently owns 15 head of cattle.

Debtors’ counsel characterized the debtors’ sale of land to the golf course as the “right thing” to do “to realize the highest return possible” from the land and stated that, while the debtors own additional land next to the acreage already sold, “it’s a ■ hay field and, until sold, will remain a hay field.” The debtors’ previous years’ tax returns show that, in 1996, they sold 8.35 acres of land, and, in 1997, they sold an additional 4.5 acres of land. (1996 Tax Rtn., Sched. D; 1997 Tax Rtn., Sched. D.) In none of the past five years would the debtors have qualified for Chapter 12 relief without the inclusion of land sales proceeds as farm income. 4

In arguing that the income from their sale of land in the year prior to filing constitutes farm income under § 101(18), the debtors rely on In re Armstrong, 812 F.2d 1024 (7th Cir.1987), a leading case in which the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that income from a debtor’s sale of farm machinery was farm income. 5 Id. at 1027. The debtors contend that, by analogy to the farm machinery proceeds in Armstrong, their land sale proceeds should be considered farm income because they, like the Armstrong debtor, sought to use their assets most effectively, making a “sound business decision” to sell the land after it appreciated in value due to a golf course being built nearby.

The determination of whether a debtor’s sale of assets results in “income from a farming operation” for purposes of § 101(18) requires consideration not only of the nature and use of the asset involved, but also the purpose for which the asset *713 was sold. 6 In this case, the Court finds unpersuasive the debtors’ attempt to link their sale of land to the sale of farm machinery in Armstrong as income from a farming operation. Although the typical farming operation involves both land and machinery, it goes without saying that land, by its very nature, has many uses other than farming, whereas farm machinery is specific in its function. The Armstrong court implicitly recognized the limited character of farm machinery when it observed that the debtor’s equipment was “purchased to work [his farm]” and was thus “inescapably interwoven” with the debtor’s farming operation. Armstrong, 812 F.2d at 1026.

By contrast to farm machinery, land is a more versatile asset and, while essential to most farming operations, can be owned for other purposes, including investment or speculation. When a debtor sells land that is held for investment or speculation, the resulting income is manifestly not “income from a farming operation.” See In re Van Fossan, 82 B.R. 77, 78-81 (Bankr.W.D.Ark.1987) (income from the sale of land which debtor admitted was held only for speculative purposes was not farm income). Here, the debtors themselves characterize the land sold in the year preceding bankruptcy as “acreage from [a] real estate development.” Wfliile this land has been used as a hay field in the recent past, the debtors apparently considered it to be investment property at the time it was sold. In any event, their characterization of the subject property as part of a “real estate development” belies their present assertion that it represented an integral part of their farming operation or that income from its sale constitutes farm income. The debtors’ sale of land, therefore, is distinguishable from the sale of farm machinery in

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 B.R. 710, 2001 WL 1646419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/integra-bank-na-v-ross-in-re-ross-ilsb-2001.