Matter of F & M Distributors, Inc.

197 B.R. 829, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 2087, 1995 WL 867871
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedMay 4, 1995
Docket19-30355
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 197 B.R. 829 (Matter of F & M Distributors, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of F & M Distributors, Inc., 197 B.R. 829, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 2087, 1995 WL 867871 (Mich. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION GRANTING BUTERA FINER FOODS, INC.’S MOTION TO COMPEL F & M DISTRIBUTORS, INC. TO PAY REAL PROPERTY TAXES ACCRUED PRE-PETITION BUT PAYABLE POST-PETITION UNDER CERTAIN UNEXPIRED LEASES OF NON-RESIDENTIAL REAL PROPERTY

WALTER SHAPERO, Bankruptcy Judge.

Background and Facts

Butera Finer Foods, Inc. (“Butera” or “Landlord”) leases space in strip shopping centers located in the Chicago area to three F & M stores. Landlord and F & M (“Debt- or”) are parties to the following lease agreements:

(1) Lease Agreement dated March 1, 1987 for 4343 North Kedzie, Chicago, IL (the “Kedzie Lease”);
(2) Sublease Agreement dated May 15, 1987 for 3046 North Halstead, Chicago, IL (the “Halsted Sublease”); and
(3) Lease Agreement dated June 26, 1987 for 4140 West Diversey, Chicago, IL (the “Diversey Lease”).

Collectively all three leases are known as the Leases.

Paragraph 4.A. of the Kedzie Lease and the Diversey Lease provide that:

Tenant shall pay and discharge before delinquent all Real Estate Taxes (as hereinafter defined) which become due during the term of this Lease. Real Estate Taxes shall mean all real estate taxes and assessments, extraordinary as well as ordinary, *830 levied or assessed by any lawful taxing authority upon the Demised Premises. 1

Paragraph 4 of the Halstead Sublease requires Debtor to pay real property taxes as required to be paid by Landlord under a certain Operating and Sublease Agreement dated October 1, 1982 between Landlord and Scot Lad Foods, Inc., which in turn requires Landlord to perform all obligations under a certain Lease Agreement, dated July 5,1973, between Amalgamated Trust & Savings Bank and National Tea Co., as amended (the “Prime Lease”). Landlord states in its brief that paragraph 17 of the Prime Lease provides that:

[Butera] further agrees to pay as additional rent for the demised premises, all real estate taxes and assessments ... which may be levied, assessed or imposed upon the demised premises ...

Debtor does not appear to dispute this. While that quoted language does not say when such taxes are to be paid, this Court is assuming that the parties agree that the “when” is similar to, or the same as, what the above-quoted language relating to the Kedzie and Diversey leases provides.

In Illinois, real property taxes are, as this Court understands it, assessed on a calendar year basis but are not billed until the following year. Judging from the Illinois tax bills involved, the amounts billed as due and payable on March 1,1995 are approximately one-half of the 1994 taxes calculated as one-half of the taxes actually assessed for the tax calendar year 1993. In other words, if the total taxes for the tax calendar year 1993 were $15,000, the amount due on March 1, 1995 (as an estimate on the 1994 taxes) is one-half of $15,000, or $7,500. Presumably, between March 1, 1995 and September 1, 1995, the taxing authorities then determine and assess the actual taxes for calendar year 1994 and send a tax bill based thereon due on September 1,1995, in an amount equal to the total taxes due for 1994, less whatever was previously paid (presumably the $7,500). After the March 1 due date, statutory penalties of one and one-half percent (1.5%) per month are assessed (apparently in the amount of the delinquent estimated payment) until the taxes are paid. 35 ILCS 205/224.1 et. seq. 2

For calendar year 1994, the taxes for premises covered by the Leases were billed to the Debtor on March 1, 1995 in the following estimated amounts:

Kedzie Lease $19,534.19
Halstead Lease 46,050.45
Diversey Lease 5,590.95
$71,175.59

Landlord anticipates that similar amounts representing the balance of the actual 1994 real estate taxes will be due September 1, 1995. 3

On February 3, 1995, this Court entered an Order providing for an extension of time until and including September 1, 1995 for Debtor to assume or reject certain executory real estate leases, including the Leases. The Order provides that “... F & M shall continue to comply and perform in accordance with Section 365(d)(3) of the Bankruptcy Code.” Debtor asserts that this section (of the tax code) requires only that it pay a prorated portion of 1994 real estate taxes attributable to the period from the Petition Date through December 31, 1994. Landlord, however, maintains that Section 365(d)(3) mandates that Debtor pay the entire amount due on March 1, 1995 because Debtor is obliged under that section to “perform all the obligations of the debtor ... arising from and after the order for relief.” Landlord and Debtor agree that the only issue in dispute between the parties is whether section 365(d)(3) of the Bankruptcy Code requires Debtor to now pay as an administrative expense the full amount of the March 1, 1995 estimated tax bill or only the portion which, by proration of the entire tax bill for 1994, covers the period between December 5, 1994 and December 31, 1994 (with the remainder *831 being considered, and ultimately treated as, a pre-petition claim). 4

Landlord asserts that, pursuant to the provisions of the three unexpired Leases which require Debtor to pay all real estate taxes and assessments that may be levied against the subject properties, Debtor is obligated to pay the full amount of the disputed taxes as an administrative expense, despite the fact that they cover or, in an accrual or cost accounting sense, are substantially related to a pre-petition period, because such taxes were billed and became payable post-petition under the relevant leases.

Debtor argues that the disputed taxes that relate to the period prior to the commencement date be treated as pre-petition claims that were unmatured as of the Commencement Date and Debtor’s tax obligations under the relevant leases should be limited to the prorated portion of the disputed taxes accruing after the commencement date.

Law and Dismission

This Court recognizes that there is a split in the authority concerning the interpretation of § 365(d)(3) with respect to the type of claim a landlord has for rent or taxes which come due subsequent to the filing of a bankruptcy petition but prior to a debtor’s assumption or rejection of the lease. A majority of courts seem to have concluded that under § 365(d)(3) rent and taxes, in what may be considered to be analogous situations, should be prorated to cover only the post-petition, pre-rejection period, regardless of the due date. 5 Other courts, however, find that under the plain language

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Bluebook (online)
197 B.R. 829, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 2087, 1995 WL 867871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-f-m-distributors-inc-mieb-1995.