Lawrence Freight Lines, Inc. v. Transport Clearings-Midwest, Inc. (In Re Transport Clearings-Midwest, Inc.)

16 B.R. 890, 1979 Bankr. LEXIS 847
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedOctober 9, 1979
Docket18-30623
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 16 B.R. 890 (Lawrence Freight Lines, Inc. v. Transport Clearings-Midwest, Inc. (In Re Transport Clearings-Midwest, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence Freight Lines, Inc. v. Transport Clearings-Midwest, Inc. (In Re Transport Clearings-Midwest, Inc.), 16 B.R. 890, 1979 Bankr. LEXIS 847 (Mo. 1979).

Opinion

AMENDED FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW, DECREE OF NONDISCHARGEABILITY OF DEFENDANT’S INDEBTEDNESS TO PLAINTIFF AND JUDGMENT FOR PLAINTIFF AND AGAINST DEFENDANT IN THE SUM OF $1,135.47

DENNIS J. STEWART, Bankruptcy Judge.

The action at bar was brought by the plaintiff, a resigned member of the defendant debtor clearinghouse, through which the plaintiff, a carrier who transported goods and merchandise for certain shippers, sought collection of its charges from the shippers. Plaintiff, by the precise terms of its complaint herein, requests a decree of nondischargeability pursuant to section 17 of the Bankruptcy Act and also seeks what the defendant interprets to be reclamation. 1

The action has been submitted to the court on a stipulation of facts of which the following is the substance:

“1. Lawrence was formerly a member of TC-Midwest. Lawrence resigned its membership in TC-Midwest, effective July 14, 1978.
“2. Lawrence did not sell or assign any of its freight bills to TC-Midwest after July 14, 1978.
“3. After July 14, 1978, a number of Lawrence’s shippers sent checks to TC-Midwest, Inc. in payment of Lawrence *892 freight bills which Lawrence had not sold or assigned to TC-Midwest. Attached as Exhibit A hereto is a list of such payments, together with the number and amount of each such freight bill, the name of the shipper and the date that TC-Midwest received payment of such freight bill from the shipper.
“4. TC-Midwest received $2,652.66 of such payments prior to filing of this proceeding on September 21, 1978, and received $554.91 of such payments on or after September 21, 1978, as set forth in the attached Exhibit A. TC-Midwest is obligated to pay to Lawrence the total amount of $3,207.57.
“5. From July 11,1978, through April 10,1979, TC-Midwest has made a number of chargebacks to Lawrence, with respect to freight bills which Lawrence sold and assigned to TC-Midwest prior to July 14, 1978. A list of such chargebacks is attached as Exhibit B hereto. Lawrence has accepted and agreed to each of these chargebacks, and the total amount of $978.48 is now due and owing from Lawrence to TC-Midwest.”

Further, it is stipulated that between the dates of July 14, 1978, and September 21, 1978, the date of the filing of the Chapter XI petition herein, some $2,652.66 was paid by certain shippers to the debtor on account of bills owed to the plaintiff. After that date, some $554.91 was paid to the debtor, erroneously, by shippers. And it is further stipulated that the plaintiff owes the debtor some $978.48 in “chargebacks”, i.e., on account of prior overpayments or erroneous payments by the debtor to the plaintiff. After October 2, 1978, the date that the court entered its order placing the debtor in possession, some $13.15 was erroneously collected.

Finally, the files and records in this case show that, among the personal property scheduled as assets in Schedule B-2 of the debtor’s petition was some $17,106,807.74 in “unapplied cash”, explained as follows:

“At September 30, 1978, Unapplied Cash amounted to $17,106,807.74. Unap-plied Cash is cash received, but for various reasons cannot be matched against specific charges in the mechanized accounts receivable system to cancel the amount. The most common causes of Unapplied Cash are:
“1. Insufficient receiving data to properly match against open charges.
“2. Duplicate payments on charges already cleared from the file. ■
“3. Payments to the Clearing House by customers which should have been paid direct to the Carrier.
“Payments received concerning items 2 and 3 above actually represent liabilities, amounts which should be refunded. However, at this time the payees and amounts are not determinable. The ‘maintenance’ of the accounts receivable system is presently in progress, but it is a very time consuming process. Currently, the estimate of time for substantially completing the ‘maintenance’ is approximately December 31, 1978.
“Unapplied Cash is recorded as a reduction of the accounts receivable total.”

It is the plaintiff’s argument, based on the stipulated and otherwise established facts, that the monies mistakenly paid by shippers to the debtor, when they should have been paid directly to the plaintiff, constitute “[mjoney paid to the bankrupt prior to bankruptcy under a mistake of fact” which “is impressed with a constructive trust that follows it into the hands of the bankruptcy trustee.” 4A Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 70.25, p. 346 (1978); In re Berry, 147 F. 208 (2d Cir. 1906). Accordingly, in addition to a decree of nondischarge-ability, the plaintiff requests that:

“. .. said funds be set aside to the credit of Lawrence Freight Line, Inc., in accordance with the provisions of § 17c(2) [and] (4) of the Bankruptcy Act and that the Trustee be ordered and directed to remit said funds to Lawrence Freight Line, Inc., and further instructed not to co-mingle said funds with other assets of the debtor.”

The debtor rejoins, however, that “[i]n order to have a constructive trust established, it is an essential requirement that there must be a fund or res ” and that:

*893 “It is not enough ... to show merely that the funds or property came into the bankrupt’s hands or went into the bankrupt’s business or, by the better view, even that the funds or property are contained somewhere in the bankrupt’s estate. If the trust fund cannot be identified in its original or substituted form, the cestui becomes merely a general creditor of the estate, for the prevailing rule in trusts is that ‘a beneficiary who cannot find the trust property has no lien or charge spread over the entire estate of the faithless trustee.’ The same result will accrue where the trust property has been disposed of or dissipated in such manner as to leave nothing in its place.” 4A Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 70.25, p. 355 (1978).

This argument is sought to be rebutted by the plaintiff’s assertion that, in its petition and schedules herein, the debtor listed some $18,000,000 in “unapplied cash” as among its assets. And surrebuttal comes in the form of an argument by the debtor that “[t]his so-called Unapplied Cash ... did not constitute a fund of cash held by the Debt- or, but ‘actually represents liabilities,’ as explained in said Schedule B.”

It thereby appears that the debtor does not deny the liability (for which, it contends, the court should “allow plaintiff to file a claim in this case as a general unsecured creditor of the debtor for said amount of $3,194.42.”), but challenges the right to its reclamation and the right to a decree of nondischargeability on account of it.

The right to immediate reclamation is not an issue which leads to the mountain of difficulty which exists in this case. In that respect, the debtor’s claims and contentions are manifestly well founded. To recover the property in specie,

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Bluebook (online)
16 B.R. 890, 1979 Bankr. LEXIS 847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-freight-lines-inc-v-transport-clearings-midwest-inc-in-re-mowb-1979.