Mann v. New Mexico Medical Foundation (In re Caraway)
This text of 61 B.R. 1000 (Mann v. New Mexico Medical Foundation (In re Caraway)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Mexico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
MEMORANDUM OPINION
This adversary proceeding was brought by the trustee to recover preferences pursuant to 11 U.S.C. 547. At the pre-trial conference, the parties agreed that there was no material dispute as to the facts and therefore submitted memorandum briefs in support of their respective positions.
The defendants are medical providers. The debtor, Mrs. Caraway, received medical and hospitalization services from the defendants. At the time of the services, she was covered by a medical and hospitalization insurance policy and executed the following document:
I hereby authorize payment directly to the [medical providers] of the medical-hospital insurance benefits otherwise payable to me but not to exceed the balance of the [medical providers’] regular charges for this period of hospitalization or treatment.
The defendants were eventually paid in excess of $13,000 but the payments occurred within the 90-day preference period, § 547(b)(4)(A).
[1001]*1001The plaintiff-trustee contends that the document executed by the debtor was not effective as an assignment of insurance benefits; consequently, payments from the insurance company to the hospital were preferential transfers of property of the estate and may thus be recovered from the medical providers. On the other hand the defendants claim the document in question was effective as an assignment; thus even though payments were made within the preference period, there was a relation back to the date the assignment was executed, which was outside the ninety days.
In briefs submitted to this Court on the issue of whether “authorization of payment” constitutes an assignment, both parties quoted authority holding this language may or may not be an assignment, depending on the specific facts in the case.1 However, after reviewing the briefs and § 547, this Court is of the opinion that the question of whether the “authorization” language is an assignment is not the operative issue.
Preference litigation is for the purpose of recovering for the estate a transfer made by or on behalf of the debtor to a [1002]*1002creditor. However, certain transfers are immune from the trustee’s power to avoid even though they occur within the otherwise applicable preference period. Section 547(c) lists seven exceptions to the trustee’s power to avoid preferential transfers. Subsection (2) appears to be controlling in this case.
Paraphrased, § 547(c)(2) states a transfer may not be avoided to the extent it was for debt incurred in the ordinary course of business or financial affairs of the debtor and the transferee, made in the ordinary course of business and made according to ordinary business terms. The facts in the case disclose the debt was incurred in just this manner. A person seeking medical treatment and who is covered by an insurance policy was asked to execute the standard form “authorization of payment”; the services were provided; and the bill was sent to the insurance company which, in the normal course of business, sent the medical provider a check. The transaction clearly arose in the ordinary course of business, and thus may not he avoided by the trustee.
Even if the ordinary course of business exception did not apply in this case, the medical provider would still have prevailed. As noted above, preference litigation is for the purpose of recovering transfers that occur during the applicable preference periods. Section 101(48) defines a transfer as “every mode, direct or indirect, absolute or conditional, voluntary or involuntary, of disposing of or parting with property or with an interest in property” (emphasis added). Consequently, whether the authorization of payment language rises to the level of an assignment is not controlling. Rather the issue is whether this language effectuated a transfer.
Within the broad definition of transfer, there is no doubt that the words “I hereby authorize payment ...” are a transfer. Since an insurance policy is property and proceeds thereof are property, the right to direct receipt of payment of those proceeds is certainly an interest in property, although not necessarily a full-fledged assignment of a property interest. It is, therefore, a transfer of an interest in property. Based upon the proposition that the “assignment of payment” is a transfer occurring when the writing is executed, it is obvious that one of the criteria for avoidance of the transfer does not exist, namély that the transfer was for and on account of an antecedent debt, § 547(b)(2). As a result of this analysis, the trustee would not prevail because the transfer took place outside the 90-day preference period.
Based on the preceeding analysis the trustee’s preference argument fails on both grounds. Plaintiff-trustee’s complaint will be dismissed. An appropriate order should be drafted and submitted within ten days by prevailing counsel.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
61 B.R. 1000, 15 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 447, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 5741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mann-v-new-mexico-medical-foundation-in-re-caraway-nmb-1986.