Lawless v. Eastern Milk Producers Cooperative Ass'n (In Re Stop-N-Go of Elmira)

30 B.R. 721, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6011
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York
DecidedJune 15, 1983
Docket1-16-10451
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 30 B.R. 721 (Lawless v. Eastern Milk Producers Cooperative Ass'n (In Re Stop-N-Go of Elmira)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawless v. Eastern Milk Producers Cooperative Ass'n (In Re Stop-N-Go of Elmira), 30 B.R. 721, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6011 (N.Y. 1983).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND DECISION

EDWARD D. HAYES, Bankruptcy Judge.

This is an action under §§ 60, 67 and 70 of the Bankruptcy Act to recover a preference and or fraudulent transfer from Stop-N-Go of Elmira, Inc., hereinafter referred to as Stop-N-Go, to Eastern Milk Producers Cooperative Association, Inc., hereinafter referred to as Eastern. The individual defendants, Thomas Butler, William Woodhull and Lawrence Creighton, were officers of Stop-N-Go. There has been extensive pretrial hearings, depositions and motions in regard to this case. But the case has been tried, briefs have been submitted and it is now ready for decision.

It appears that Thomas Butler, William Woodhull and Lawrence Creighton were officers and the sole owners of a corporation known as Maple Farms, Inc., hereinafter referred to as Maple. They operated this corporation for some 25 years prior to December of 1978. Some nine years before December of 1978, Butler, Woodhull and Creighton formed a new corporation known as Stop-N-Go of Elmira. This corporation was owned by the three principals and Maple.

Maple was a dairy. It processed milk and sold milk to various retail outlets. Stop-N-Go in the year 1978 had some 26 convenient stores located across the Southern Tier of the State of New York. Maple purchased milk from defendant, Eastern, beginning in 1976. In the Fall of 1977, Maple was delinquent some $300,000 in their payments to Eastern. In February of 1978, they gave a note to Eastern in the amount of $300,000 as evidence of the debt which they owed Eastern. Eastern throughout 1978 continued to supply Maple with milk at the rate of about $100,000 worth of milk per month. *723 One payment of $50,000 plus some interest was made upon the $300,000 note. However, by September 30, 1978, Eastern was owed by Maple $549,648.26 on their current account and they owed $254,650.20 on the note.

Mr. Dorn, who was the financial manager of Eastern, became concerned in late 1977 and early 1978 over Maple’s delinquency to Eastern. He was instrumental in securing the note from Maple and its president, Mr. Butler, in February of 1978. He was the only unsecured creditor of Maple who received notice of the negotiations which Mr. Butler began with the franchisor of Stop-N-Go to sell the 26 outlets which Stop-N-Go had to the franchisor, Sun Oil Company. Subsequently, in about August of 1978, the negotiations between Maple and the Sun Oil Company for the purchase of the corporations known as Stop-N-Go and Maple by Sun Oil Company failed. Mr. Dorn was apprised of the failure of these negotiations but he was also apprised of the fact that Stop-N-Go was negotiating with another franchisor, Southland Company, which operated the Seven-Eleven Stores.

During Butler’s and Dorn’s discussions in August of 1978, Dorn suggested to Butler that Stop-N-Go secure the debt of Maple to Eastern. He did this after he reviewed the June 30,1978 statements of both Maple and Stop-N-Go. Dorn, who was a CPA, and had spent some time with a national firm acting as an account executive and CPA, had looked over the financial statements of both Maple and Stop-N-Go. The statements provided by Stop-N-Go and Maple were unaudited ones. They did disclose that on June 30, 1978, Stop-N-Go had approximately $34,000 in net worth. Subsequently, it was discovered that in fact this net worth was over stated.

On September 29, 1978, Stop-N-Go who had other unsecured creditors and at that time owed no money to Eastern guaranteed the debt of Maple to Eastern by giving Eastern security in just about everything Stop-N-Go owned. The Security Agreement was properly filed. On the day following that guarantee, the total debt owed by Maple to Eastern was $804,298.46. This guarantee by Stop-N-Go of Maple’s debt, if it were called upon to pay it, would render Stop-N-Go insolvent.

In the meantime, the Department of Agriculture of the State of New York, as a result of reports filed by Eastern with the Department of Agriculture, had commenced an action against Maple to revoke its license to process milk. In November of 1978, to close out this action, Stop-N-Go consented that the proceeds of its then contract with the Southland Corporation be assigned to Eastern in payment of Stop-N-Go’s guarantee of Maple’s debt and in payment of Maple’s debt to Eastern. Stop-N-Go during this entire period of time was buying milk from Maple under its d/b/a All Star Dairy. They were buying approximately 70% of the milk produced by Maple.

After one adjourned closing, the South-land deal to purchase Maple and Stop-N-Go was closed on December 29, 1978. At that time, Southland and its attorneys insisted that all secured debts be paid. Southland Corporation and Taylor Car Leasing Company, a wholly owned subsidiary, had transferred to Marine Midland Bank a total amount of $2,272,492.96 to be available for the purchase of Maple and Stop-N-Go. During the day of December 29, 1978, an inventory was taken to determine the amount to be paid by Southland and its subsidiary, Taylor. The physical inventory figure taken on that day was substantially below the June 30th physical inventory amount which had been used as a guide for the Stop-N-Go figures. The deal was consummated and from the buyer’s escrow fund the following transfers were made. An escrow account was established at Marine Midland Bank of $42,000. Two deposits were made to Stop-N-Go totaling $1,649,226.81. A deposit was made to Maple’s account of $257,097.55 and a wire transfer was made to the Dallas headquarters of Southland Corporation and Taylor Car Leasing of the balance of $324,168.60. At the same time, checks were certified and issued to secured creditors. Stop-N-Go’s secured creditors got $945,266.05. Maple’s se *724 cured creditors, including Eastern, got $1,042,665.08. There was a transfer by Stop-N-Go to Maple of $723,915.07 in checks by Stop-N-Go to All Star Dairy, the d/b/a of Maple and a check from Stop-N-Go for $61,652.46 to cover the shortfall of Maple’s payment to Eastern. Eastern received in all a total of $811,995.99 in certified checks from Maple and received in return a release of Maple’s debt to Eastern. After the payments by Stop-N-Go, over a $1,000,000 worth of unsecured creditors of Stop-N-Go, had about $6,000 to split up amongst themselves. These creditors filed an involuntary petition for Stop-N-Go on January 30,1979. Subsequently, Stop-N-Go was adjudicated and John B. Lawless was elected trustee by the creditors.

Based upon this set of facts, the trustee is seeking to recover $785,567.33 from Eastern on the theory that there was a preference and or a fraudulent transfer. Eastern, on the other hand, is claiming that they had a lien upon the assets of Maple pursuant to a 1977 security agreement. The Southland contract required that Eastern be paid in full and its lien on Maple satisfied prior to closing. They received no money from Stop-N-Go and Maple paid off the secured claim of Eastern so that the Southland deal could go through. They claim there was no preference and no fraudulent transfer. Eastern also challenges the jurisdiction of this Court to hear this case under Northern Pipeline Construction Co. v. Marathon Pipeline Co., - U.S. -, 102 S.Ct. 2858, 73 L.Ed.2d 598 (1982). The three individual defendants put in no testimony and really did not participate in the trial.

In pertinent part, § 67(d)(2) of the Bankruptcy Act (11 U.S.C. §

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Bluebook (online)
30 B.R. 721, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawless-v-eastern-milk-producers-cooperative-assn-in-re-stop-n-go-of-nywb-1983.