Matter of Mid Atlantic Fund, Inc.

60 B.R. 604, 14 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1435, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 6134
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 2, 1986
Docket19-10211
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 60 B.R. 604 (Matter of Mid Atlantic Fund, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Mid Atlantic Fund, Inc., 60 B.R. 604, 14 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1435, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 6134 (N.Y. 1986).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION DENYING RECLAMATION MOTION (FREDEBAUGH MORTGAGE)

PRUDENCE B. ABRAM, Bankruptcy Judge:

Malcolm Davis and Monroe Seibel (the “Creditors”), prepetition judgment creditors of Mid Atlantic Fund, Inc. (“Mid Atlantic” or “Debtor”), filed a motion on November 20, 1984 seeking an order directing the Trustee in this Chapter 7 bankruptcy proceeding to account for and turn over all monies received pursuant to a certain note and mortgage (collectively the “Frede-baugh Mortgage”) and to deliver to the Creditors the original note and mortgage and assignment. The Trustee has provided an accounting but has opposed the Credi *606 tors’ reclamation request. Based on the findings of fact and conclusions of law set forth below, the Creditors’ motion is denied.

. FACTS

Mid Atlantic was a small business investment company licensed by the U.S. Small Business Administration. It extended lpans to individuals and companies which did not have.access to normal credit markets.

Mid Atlantic failed to pay to the Creditors at maturity two unsecured notes in the aggregate principal amount of $100,000 issued on or about August 15, 1979. The Creditors thereafter brought an action in the Supreme Court of New York and obtained a judgment against Mid Atlantic on or about September 16, 1980 in the amount of $113,087.50. Following efforts to obtain payment of the judgments, the Creditors entered into an agreement with. Mid Atlantic on February 6, 1981 (the “Payment Agreement”) whereby Mid Atlantic paid $12,500 to the Creditors and also assigned the' Fredebaugh Mortgage to them as collateral security for the payment of the judgment. The Fredebaugh Mortgage is a purchase money note and mortgage in the principal amount of $30,000, bearing interest at a rate of 9% per annum made by David L. and Agnes D. Fredebaugh secured by real property located in the Virgin . Islands and duly recorded. In return for the cash payment and the assignment of the Fredebaugh Mortgage, the Creditors agreed to cease prosecution of their lawsuit for a period of ninety days.

The Creditors did not record the assignment to them of the Fredebaugh Mortgage prior to the filing of an involuntary Chapter 7 petition against Mid Atlantic less than 90 days later and on April 20, 1981. An order of relief was entered on May 29, 1981, Albert Togut (the “Trustee”) was appointed trustee on or about June 17, 1981.

Some time soon after his appointment, the Trustee notified the Creditors that their security interest in the Fredebaugh Mortgage was unperfected and that if they sought to enforce it the Trustee would commence an action to avoid the assignment as a preferential transfer under Bankruptcy Code § 547(b). 1 Subsequently, the Trustee and the Creditors entered into a stipulation, approved by this court on May 23, 1983, extending until June 3, 1984 the time within which the Trustee could institute an adversary proceeding against the Creditors. 2 The Trustee commenced no adversary proceeding within the time fixed by the stipulation.

After the expiration of the extended date and by letters dated August 1 and 20,1984, the Creditors demanded that the Trustee account to and turn over to them the monies he had received as payments under the Fredebaugh Mortgage. When the Trustee did not respond to the August 1984 letters, the Creditors filed the present motion. The Trustee has possession of the original Fre-debaugh Mortgage. After his appointment, the Trustee received all payments *607 due under the Fredebaugh Mortgage. After the execution of the Payment Agreement and prior to bankruptcy, Mid Atlantic collected the payments on the Fredebaugh Mortgage. The Creditors never advised the Fredebaughs of the assignment of the Fredebaugh Mortgage to them or requested that the Fredebaughs make payment to them.

POSITION OF CREDITORS

The Creditors claim that the assignment of the Fredebaugh Mortgage was an outright and absolute assignment to them in payment of their judgment against Mid Atlantic. They assert that the two-year statute of limitation provided by Bankruptcy Code § 546, 3 as extended by the parties’ stipulation, now bars the Trustee from taking any action to avoid the assignment of the Fredebaugh Mortgage. 4

POSITION OF TRUSTEE

The Trustee asserts several grounds on which he may avoid the unrecorded assignment of the Fredebaugh Mortgage. If the assignment was an absolute one as claimed by the Creditors, the Trustee asserts that he may avoid it as a hypothetical bona fide purchaser of real estate under Bankruptcy Code § 544(a)(3). 5 If, as the Trustee believes, the assignment was only collateral, the Trustee asserts that the Creditors’ interest is an unperfected security interest which he may avoid as a hypothetical lien creditor under Code § 544(a)(2). 6 The Trustee also urges that the assignment was plainly preferential under Code § 547 whether it was absolute or conditional.

In response to the Creditors’ assertion that Code § 546 bars the Trustee’s present assertion of his avoidance powers, the Trustee argues that statute of limitations is inapplicable where, as here, the Trustee is not commencing an action or proceeding but merely relying on Code § 502(d) 7 to cause the disallowance of the Creditors’ claim.

DISCUSSION

The court has considered the Creditors’ argument that the assignment to *608 them constituted an outright assignment and finds it unpersuasive. 8 The plain language of the Payment Agreement rebuts their contention. The Payment Agreement provides in relevant part that:

“WHEREAS Fund [i.e. Mid Atlantic] desires to assign its rights to a note and the mortgage securing that note to the creditors jointly as collateral to secure the debt to the creditor * * *
<* * * *
“1. Fund hereby assigns to the creditors, jointly, as collateral for the debt, the First Priority Purchase Money Mortgage Note in the amount of $30,000 * * and the First Priority Purchase Money Mortgage * * (Emphasis added).

The use of the phrase “as collateral” can have no other meaning than that the assignment was intended to be a security device. Moreover, had the parties intended that the assignment be an absolute one, they necessarily would have had to agree on the amount of the judgment which was to be considered paid as the Fredebaugh Mortgage was not cash or a cash equivalent. Agreement would have been required to assign it a present value taking due account of its long-term nature, interest coupon and the value of the real property. There is no such agreement in the Payment Agreement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 B.R. 604, 14 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1435, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 6134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-mid-atlantic-fund-inc-nysb-1986.