MEMORANDUM OPINION
ROBERT E. GINSBERG, Bankruptcy Judge.
I.
The Facts
This case can most easily be understood by beginning with a chronological review of the facts.
In August, 1978, the owner of Agostino’s Restaurant in Chicago, Illinois, Ms. Alba Sciacqua, entered into an agreement to sell the restaurant to Frank Reda, the debtor’s president.
On September 15, 1978, Prank
Reda executed an installment note in the amount of $220,000.00 payable to Alba Sci-acqua. On that same date Frank Reda executed a security agreement (chattel mortgage) granting Alba Sciacqua a security interest in Reda, Inc.’s equipment. On November 29, 1978, Frank Reda signed a Uniform Commercial Code Financing Statement covering: “[r]estaurant, cocktail lounge and catering business; furnishings and equipment of all personal property located at 7 East Delaware Place, Chicago, Illinois.”
Alba Sciacqua was named as the secured party. On November 29, 1978, Sciacqua attempted to perfect her security interest by filing a financing statement with the Cook County Recorder of Deeds. Of course, the financing statement should have been filed with the Illinois Secretary of State under § 9-401 of the Illinois U.C.C. As pointed out below, this error in filing is not fatal to the Sciacqua secured claim. Sometime thereafter, the debtor obtained insurance covering the restaurant’s premises from Union Indemnity Insurance Company of New York (“Union Indemnity” or “the insurance company”). The insurance policy listed Alba Sciacqua among the named insureds.
On May 24, 1982, Frank Reda on behalf of the debtor executed a note in the amount of $150,000.00 payable to Water Tower Trust and Savings Bank (“the Bank” or “Water Tower”). On that same date Frank Reda executed a security agreement granting the Bank a security interest in the inventory, equipment, fixtures and furnishings of Reda, Inc. On May 27, 1982, the Bank filed a financing statement signed by Frank Reda with the Illinois Secretary of State covering all of the debtor’s inventory, equipment, fixtures and furnishings, including the furnishings and equipment previously pledged to Sciacqua and covered by Sciacqua’s earlier valid financing statement. The Bank has admitted through stipulation and testimony that when it filed its financing statement, it was aware of Alba Sciacqua’s prior security interest in the same collateral although Sci-acqua’s interest had erroneously been filed with the Recorder of Deeds rather than the Secretary of State. (Record 7/9/85 at 32-33, 59-63). On May 19, 1982, the insurance company issued an endorsement to that insurance policy that added Water Tower Trust and Savings Bank as mortgagee as a loss payee.
On April 13, 1983, a fire occurred at Agostino’s Restaurant and caused extensive damage. At the time of the fire, the debtor owed Alba Sciacqua $183,676.81 on the September 15, 1978 note and owed the Bank at least $150,000.00 on the May 24, 1982 loan. On April 18, 1983, the debtor hired Lazarus-Willis and Associates, a public fire insurance adjuster, to analyze the extent of the damage and- negotiate a settlement with Union Indemnity. Lazarus-Willis and the debtor entered into a contract to adjust the fire loss. Under that contract, the debtor agreed to assign ten percent of any insurance proceeds to Lazarus-Willis as. compensation for Lazarus-Willis’s services. Lazarus-Willis immediately began taking steps to compute the debtor’s loss claim from the fire and to pursue that claim with the insurance company.
On November 29, 1983, after the fire had occurred but before either the claim had been paid or the debtor had filed bankruptcy, five years ran on Alba Sciacqua’s fi
nancing statement covering the restaurant’s furnishings and equipment without a continuation statement being filed, causing Sciacqua’s financing statement to lapse under § 9-403 of the U.C.C. On July 30, 1984, the debtor filed its petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. On March 19, 1985, the Union Indemnity Insurance Company of New York issued a check in the amount of $74,206.09 as settlement for the damage to the restaurant’s contents from the fire. The check was made payable to Reda, Inc., Alba Sciacqua, Water Tower Trust and Savings Bank and All American Bank of Chicago.
On April 11, 1985, the debtor brought a motion for disbursement of the funds. Both Sciacqua and the Bank assert a claim to those funds as a secured creditor. Each claims to be ahead of the other in priority. Lazarus-Willis filed a petition and claim for ten percent of the insurance check representing its fees under its agreement with the debtor, asserting it should be paid ten percent of the proceeds ahead of either Sciacqua or Water Tower. Thereafter, this Court heard testimony and argument over a period of two days. The parties also have filed proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.
II.
The Issues
1.Does Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code apply to determine priorities in the insurance proceeds between Sciacqua and the Bank during the period after the fire destroyed the collateral, but before the insurance company issued the check, i.e. while the unpaid claim was being developed and pending?
2. Between the Bank and Sciacqua, without regard to knowledge, who prevails under the U.C.C. in light of the fact that Sciacqua’s security interest was perfected at the time of the fire but had lapsed by the time that Union Indemnity issued the insurance check?
3. Assuming the Bank wins on the second issue, does the Bank’s earlier knowledge of Sciacqua’s prior perfected security interest prevent that junior secured party from becoming superior under Illinois law where the prior interest has subsequently lapsed?
4. Is Lazarus-Willis entitled to have its fees paid from the insurance proceeds ahead of the claims of either or both parties claiming to be secured by those same proceeds where those parties had perfected security interests in the proceeds at the time the agreement between Lazarus-Willis and the debtor was entered into?
III.
Analysis
A.
The Dispute Between the Secured Creditors
— Sciacqua
versus the Bank
1.
Governing Law
Before the Court can analyze the priority of the parties’ security interests, it must determine whether to apply the Uniform Commercial Code or state insurance law to the events that occurred after the fire destroyed the collateral, but before Union Indemnity issued the check. In general, Article 9 of the U.C.C. does not apply to security interests in insurance or in claims under insurance policies. U.C.C. § 9-104(g).
Thus, in cases involving security
interests in insurance policies, the Court must refer to state law other than the U.C.C.
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MEMORANDUM OPINION
ROBERT E. GINSBERG, Bankruptcy Judge.
I.
The Facts
This case can most easily be understood by beginning with a chronological review of the facts.
In August, 1978, the owner of Agostino’s Restaurant in Chicago, Illinois, Ms. Alba Sciacqua, entered into an agreement to sell the restaurant to Frank Reda, the debtor’s president.
On September 15, 1978, Prank
Reda executed an installment note in the amount of $220,000.00 payable to Alba Sci-acqua. On that same date Frank Reda executed a security agreement (chattel mortgage) granting Alba Sciacqua a security interest in Reda, Inc.’s equipment. On November 29, 1978, Frank Reda signed a Uniform Commercial Code Financing Statement covering: “[r]estaurant, cocktail lounge and catering business; furnishings and equipment of all personal property located at 7 East Delaware Place, Chicago, Illinois.”
Alba Sciacqua was named as the secured party. On November 29, 1978, Sciacqua attempted to perfect her security interest by filing a financing statement with the Cook County Recorder of Deeds. Of course, the financing statement should have been filed with the Illinois Secretary of State under § 9-401 of the Illinois U.C.C. As pointed out below, this error in filing is not fatal to the Sciacqua secured claim. Sometime thereafter, the debtor obtained insurance covering the restaurant’s premises from Union Indemnity Insurance Company of New York (“Union Indemnity” or “the insurance company”). The insurance policy listed Alba Sciacqua among the named insureds.
On May 24, 1982, Frank Reda on behalf of the debtor executed a note in the amount of $150,000.00 payable to Water Tower Trust and Savings Bank (“the Bank” or “Water Tower”). On that same date Frank Reda executed a security agreement granting the Bank a security interest in the inventory, equipment, fixtures and furnishings of Reda, Inc. On May 27, 1982, the Bank filed a financing statement signed by Frank Reda with the Illinois Secretary of State covering all of the debtor’s inventory, equipment, fixtures and furnishings, including the furnishings and equipment previously pledged to Sciacqua and covered by Sciacqua’s earlier valid financing statement. The Bank has admitted through stipulation and testimony that when it filed its financing statement, it was aware of Alba Sciacqua’s prior security interest in the same collateral although Sci-acqua’s interest had erroneously been filed with the Recorder of Deeds rather than the Secretary of State. (Record 7/9/85 at 32-33, 59-63). On May 19, 1982, the insurance company issued an endorsement to that insurance policy that added Water Tower Trust and Savings Bank as mortgagee as a loss payee.
On April 13, 1983, a fire occurred at Agostino’s Restaurant and caused extensive damage. At the time of the fire, the debtor owed Alba Sciacqua $183,676.81 on the September 15, 1978 note and owed the Bank at least $150,000.00 on the May 24, 1982 loan. On April 18, 1983, the debtor hired Lazarus-Willis and Associates, a public fire insurance adjuster, to analyze the extent of the damage and- negotiate a settlement with Union Indemnity. Lazarus-Willis and the debtor entered into a contract to adjust the fire loss. Under that contract, the debtor agreed to assign ten percent of any insurance proceeds to Lazarus-Willis as. compensation for Lazarus-Willis’s services. Lazarus-Willis immediately began taking steps to compute the debtor’s loss claim from the fire and to pursue that claim with the insurance company.
On November 29, 1983, after the fire had occurred but before either the claim had been paid or the debtor had filed bankruptcy, five years ran on Alba Sciacqua’s fi
nancing statement covering the restaurant’s furnishings and equipment without a continuation statement being filed, causing Sciacqua’s financing statement to lapse under § 9-403 of the U.C.C. On July 30, 1984, the debtor filed its petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. On March 19, 1985, the Union Indemnity Insurance Company of New York issued a check in the amount of $74,206.09 as settlement for the damage to the restaurant’s contents from the fire. The check was made payable to Reda, Inc., Alba Sciacqua, Water Tower Trust and Savings Bank and All American Bank of Chicago.
On April 11, 1985, the debtor brought a motion for disbursement of the funds. Both Sciacqua and the Bank assert a claim to those funds as a secured creditor. Each claims to be ahead of the other in priority. Lazarus-Willis filed a petition and claim for ten percent of the insurance check representing its fees under its agreement with the debtor, asserting it should be paid ten percent of the proceeds ahead of either Sciacqua or Water Tower. Thereafter, this Court heard testimony and argument over a period of two days. The parties also have filed proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.
II.
The Issues
1.Does Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code apply to determine priorities in the insurance proceeds between Sciacqua and the Bank during the period after the fire destroyed the collateral, but before the insurance company issued the check, i.e. while the unpaid claim was being developed and pending?
2. Between the Bank and Sciacqua, without regard to knowledge, who prevails under the U.C.C. in light of the fact that Sciacqua’s security interest was perfected at the time of the fire but had lapsed by the time that Union Indemnity issued the insurance check?
3. Assuming the Bank wins on the second issue, does the Bank’s earlier knowledge of Sciacqua’s prior perfected security interest prevent that junior secured party from becoming superior under Illinois law where the prior interest has subsequently lapsed?
4. Is Lazarus-Willis entitled to have its fees paid from the insurance proceeds ahead of the claims of either or both parties claiming to be secured by those same proceeds where those parties had perfected security interests in the proceeds at the time the agreement between Lazarus-Willis and the debtor was entered into?
III.
Analysis
A.
The Dispute Between the Secured Creditors
— Sciacqua
versus the Bank
1.
Governing Law
Before the Court can analyze the priority of the parties’ security interests, it must determine whether to apply the Uniform Commercial Code or state insurance law to the events that occurred after the fire destroyed the collateral, but before Union Indemnity issued the check. In general, Article 9 of the U.C.C. does not apply to security interests in insurance or in claims under insurance policies. U.C.C. § 9-104(g).
Thus, in cases involving security
interests in insurance policies, the Court must refer to state law other than the U.C.C. Nevertheless, we conclude that Article 9 of the U.C.C. should apply to resolve the dispute between Sciacqua and the Bank. All events that have transpired in this case from the time the parties filed their financing statements to the time the insurance check was issued must be analyzed under Article 9. We reach this conclusion because we believe that this is not a case involving a security interest in insurance as such. Instead the parties’ rights to the insurance proceeds derive from their original security interests, security interests which clearly were covered by Article 9.
An analysis of the 1972 version of U.C.C. §§ 9-306 and 9-104(g), both of which are in effect in Illinois, compels this approach.
Section 9-306 governs a secured party’s rights to the proceeds of collateral covered by a security interest. This statutory section is directly relevant because the instant case involves competing claims to the insurance proceeds payable as a result of damage to the debtor’s equipment, fixtures and furnishings, i.e. to collateral covered by Article 9.
Section 9-306(1) provides in part:
‘Proceeds’ includes whatever is received upon the sale, exchange, collection or other disposition of collateral or proceeds. Insurance payable by reason of loss or damage to the collateral is proceeds, except to the extent that it is payable to a person other than a party to the security agreement.
Although at least one court has interpreted § 9-306 to mean that proceeds do not come into existence until they are received,
Terra Western Corp. v. Berry & Co.,
207 Neb. 28, 33-34, 295 N.W.2d 693, 697 (1980), the better view is that the
right to payment
under the insurance policy is also proceeds for these purposes and is subject to Article 9 of the U.C.C.
Brown v. First Nat. Bank of Dewey,
617 F.2d 581, 583-84 (10th Cir.1980);
Paskow v. Calvert Fire Insurance Co.,
579 F.2d 949, 954 (5th Cir.1978);
PPG Industries v. Hartford Fire Insurance Co.,
531 F.2d 58, 62 (2d Cir.1976);
Kahn v. Capital Bank,
384 So.2d 976, 977 (D.Fla.1980);
In re Linders Card Shop, Inc.,
27 U.C.C.Rep.Serv. 575, 580 (S.D.N.Y.1979);
Aetna Insurance Co. v. Texas Thermal Industries,
436 F.Supp. 371, 376-77 (E.D.Tex.1977), aff'
d,
591 F.2d 1035 (5th Cir.1979);
See also
B. Clark, The Law of Secured Transactions Under The Uniform Commercial Code, ¶ 1.8(7) (1980).
Accordingly, Article 9. of the U.C.C. should apply where the security interest is not in the policy itself but is in proceeds of insurance payable on account of the destruction of underlying collateral, such as the equipment and fixtures in this case, which are covered by Article 9. The 1972 amendments to § 9-104(g) further compel this result. The 1972 amendments added an exception to the exception where the insurance proceeds are also Article 9 proceeds under § 9-306. As indicated in the previous paragraph, there is no doubt under § 9-306 that the proceeds resulting from the fire loss to this collateral are Article 9 “proceeds.”
Thus, we cannot avoid concluding that Article 9 governs at all stages of the transactions in question in determining priorities between Sciacqua and the Bank. It obviously governed at the time of Sciacqua’s and the Bank’s original secured transactions. It also governs priorities in the right to payments accruing
at the time of the fire. Finally, it governs priorities between the secured parties in the cash proceeds paid by the insurance company which, of course, is the heart of the dispute this Court must resolve.
To hold otherwise, i.e., to hold that the situation at the precise time that Sciacqua’s filing lapsed, after the fire but before the check was issued, is not covered by Article 9 due to § 9-104(g) leads to the absurd result of Jhe first and third stages of this series of events being covered by Article 9, while the second stage is outside of Article 9 and is governed by non-Code state law. The more logical result of having the entire case determined by Article 9 rules can be reached simply by interpreting § 9-306(1) to mean what it says, that the right to the payment of insurance proceeds on account of damage to Article 9 collateral is “proceeds” for Article 9 purposes.
Such a reading does not strain the language of either § 9-104(g) or § 9-306(1) or the Official Comments thereto. Indeed, such a reading comports with the spirit of Article 9 to organize and simplify the law governing secured transactions in personal property by having a single body of law — Article 9 — resolve this priority dispute between secured parties.
Cf.
U.C.C. §§ 1-102(1)-(2), § 9-102. This would appear to be one of the purposes underlying the 1972 amendments to §§ 9-104(g) and 9-306(1).
Viewing the events in question from an Article 9 perspective, the series of events should be viewed as a continuum. At first both Sciacqua and the Bank had security interests in the debtor’s equipment, furnishings, and fixtures (at least as assumed in this opinion). Once the fire destroyed or damaged the restaurant’s equipment, furnishings, and fixtures, Sciacqua’s and the Bank’s security interests shifted from the collateral to the right to the proceeds under the insurance policy. When Union Indemnity issued the insurance check, Sciacqua’s and the Bank’s security interests then shifted to the actual proceeds of the insurance policy.
See PPG Industries, Inc. v. Hartford Fire Insurance Co.,
531 F.2d 58, 62 (2d Cir.1976);
Aetna Insurance Co. v. Texas Thermal Industries,
436 F.Supp. 371, 376-77 (E.D.Tex.1977),
aff'd,
591 F.2d 1035 (5th Cir.1979). By the time of the final shift the Sciacqua security interest had become unperfected. The next question becomes what the effect of that lapse in perfection is in terms of priority.
2.
Priority of Secured Claims
Section 9-403 of the Uniform Commercial Code provides that a filed financing statement is effective for a period of five years from the date of filing. It also provides that a filed financing statement lapses if a continuation statement has not been filed within six months prior to the expiration of the five year period. In this case, Sciacqua failed to file a continuation statement at any time prior to the termination of the five year statutory time limit which expired on November 29, 1983, and, on that date, Sciacqua’s financing statement lapsed under the U.C.C. These facts are not in dispute.
The controversy in this case centers around the consequences of the lapse of Sciacqua’s financing statement. The Bank urges the Court to apply the literal language of § 9-403(2). That language states that “[u]pon lapse the security interest becomes unperfected ... (and) it is deemed to have been unperfected as against a person who became a purchaser or lien creditor before lapse.”
Sciacqua does not seriously contest that this provision by its literal terms applies in these circumstances.
We agree that this language in § 9-403 bears directly on the issue of priority raised by the facts of this case. It is true that Sciacqua, by filing her financing statement first, had priority over the Bank in the collateral when the fire occurred at the restaurant on April 13, 1983. U.C.C. § 9-312(5)(a). However, while both parties were awaiting payment of the insurance proceeds, Sciacqua allowed her security interest to lapse. Section 9-403 unequivocally provides that once Sciacqua’s filed financing statement lapsed the Bank’s junior interest in the proceeds automatically assumed a superior status to Sciacqua’s now unperfected security interest so long as the Bank’s interest remained perfected.
See also
U.C.C. §§ 9-306(3), 312(5)(a).
Frank v. James Talcott, Inc.,
692 F.2d 734, 739 (11th Cir.1982);
Security Nat. Bank v. Dentsply Professional Plan,
617 P.2d 1340, 1343 (Okla.1980);
Morse Electro Products Corp. v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Co.,
90 Wash.2d 195, 579 P.2d 1341, 1343 (1978) (en banc) (dicta).
3.
Knowledge of Prior Interest
Sciacqua urges the Court to take an alternate route in deciding the parties’ priority. Sciacqua concedes that she recorded the November 29, 1978 financing statement with the Cook County Recorder of Deeds rather than with the Illinois Secretary of State as required by § 9-401(1)(c) of the Illinois statutes.
Sciacqua argues that a filing made in good faith in an improper place is effective against subsequent parties who became secured by the same collateral, and who had knowledge of the contents of the improperly filed prior security interest. U.C.C. § 9-401(2). Thus, Sciac-qua concludes that the Bank’s knowledge of her security interest permanently prevents the promotion of the Bank’s junior security interest even after the expiration of the five year period.
Sciacqua’s argument, however, misses the point. Although her security interest may have been perfected at one time by virtue of § 9-401(2) of the Illinois statutes and have been effective against the Bank by virtue of the Bank’s knowledge, it lapsed and became junior to the Bank’s perfected security interest on November 29, 1983. The lapse provision is § 9-403, not § 9-401. While knowledge may be relevant under § 9-401(2), the Bank’s knowledge of Sciacqua’s security interest is irrelevant for purposes of § 9-
403. That section nowhere states that a junior secured party’s knowledge of a prior security interest prevents that junior secured party from prevailing over the prior secured party once the prior party’s filed financing statement lapses. Courts also have wisely declined to read such language into the U.C.C.
See Frank v. James Talcott, Inc.,
692 F.2d at 739;
Growth Properties v. Lempert,
144 Cal.App.3d 983, 989, 193 Cal.Rptr. 102, 105 (Dist.Ct.App.1983).
In addition Sciacqua cannot avoid the five year limitation on filed financing statements imposed by § 9-403 by erroneously filing with the Recorder of Deeds rather than the Secretary of State. Sciacqua cannot seriously argue that a financing statement filed erroneously with the Recorder of Deeds has no expiration date, while one correctly filed with the Secretary of State lasts only five years. If that were the case, all creditors with Article 9 security interests should “erroneously” file their financing statements with the Recorder of Deeds in addition to filing with the Secretary of State to maximize the protection against lapse at least as to those creditors with knowledge. Such a result is absurd.
The policies behind Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code mandate the result we reach in this case. Article 9 was adopted in part to provide notice to parties about the debtor’s property and offer certainty and protection to a party with a secured interest in that property.
In re Southern Properties, Inc.,
44 Bankr. 838, 844 (Bankr.E.D.Va.1984).
See also
B. Clark,
supra
n. 7 at ¶ 3.1. The filing of a continuation statement helps further these goals. The continuation statement lets other parties know that the secured party’s security interest is to extend beyond the five year period. This is true even though a fire destroyed or damaged the collateral. For example, after the fire third parties might have negotiated with the debtor as part of a reconstruction loan to acquire a security interest in both undamaged furnishings and equipment and in the proceeds of the insurance policy covering damaged furnishings and equipment. Such a lender should have been able to determine whether Sciacqua had a security interest in the inventory and equipment before the fire and in the proceeds after the fire. Because Sciacqua’s financing statement had lapsed, the lender should be able to assume that it could lend against all of the collateral safely.
It is therefore necessary for a secured party to maintain its priority position by filing a continuation statement to give notice to such third parties. •
Nothing in the Uniform Commercial Code relieves the secured party of the duty to maintain a current financing statement on file if the collateral is destroyed or damaged. U.C.C. § 9-403. In fact, the U.C.C. provides only three exceptions to the rule that secured parties must file continuation statements to remain perfected. None of the exceptions apply in this case.
The drafters of the Uniform Commercial Code and the Illinois legislature recognized the necessity of certain exceptions but did not include the destruction of the collateral among them. This Court will not create a fourth exception judicially.
Thus, this Court concludes that Water Tower’s perfected security interest in the proceeds takes priority over Sciacqua’s earlier but unperfected security interest in those same proceeds.
B.
The Priority of the Fire Insurance Adjuster
The debtor hired Lazarus-Willis in its capacity as a public fire insurance adjuster soon after the fire at the restaurant and well before the debtor filed its bankruptcy petition. The debtor agreed to pay Lazarus-Willis ten percent of the insurance proceeds it helped obtain by purporting to assign ten percent of the future proceeds to Lazarus-Willis.
The evidence indicates that the debtor entered into the contract with Lazarus-Willis, including the ten percent contingent fee arrangement, willingly and not under any kind of duress or lack of understanding as to all of its terms. There is no doubt that Lazarus-Willis would be entitled to its fees ahead of any claims the debtor might be able to assert to the insurance proceeds.
However, the question remains whether the ten percent contingent fee arrangement is enforceable against the secured creditor, Water Tower, so as to enable Lazarus-Willis to be paid out of the proceeds which its efforts produced. Otherwise, there will be no proceeds left for Lazarus-Willis after Water Tower has been paid for its claim.
At the time the debtor filed its petition, its contract with Lazarus-Willis was still executory in nature. An executory contract generally is defined as a contract under which the obligations of both parties are so far unperformed that failure of either to complete performance would constitute a material breach excusing the other from performance.
Charles J. Willis of
the firm testified that Lazarus-Willis did not complete its work on the claim until December 1984, which was after the petition was filed on July 30, 1984. As of the time of the petition the claim had yet to be resolved and Lazarus-Willis had yet to be paid any fees it might have earned. Hence, the contract in question was exec-utory on the date the debtor filed its petition and is governed by § 365. Under § 365(d)(2) a Chapter 11 debtor such as Reda, Inc. may assume or reject an exec-utory contract such as the Lazarus-Willis agreement at any time until the plan is confirmed unless the court on the request of the other par-ty to the contract fixes an earlier date for the debtor to assume or reject. The debtor’s decision to assume or reject an executory contract is subject to court approval. Reda, Inc. has neither had a plan confirmed nor has it filed any motion to assume or reject the Lazarus-Willis agreement. Lazarus-Willis has not asked the Court to fix a time for the debtor to assume or reject this agreement. Nevertheless, this case presents the rare instance where the debtor’s actions with regard to an executory contract constitute an assumption of that agreement for § 365 purposes.
See, e.g., In re Concrete Pipe Machinery Co.,
28 Bankr. 837, 841 (Bankr.N.D.Iowa 1983);
In re California Steel Co.,
24 Bankr. 185, 188 (Bankr.N.D.Ill.1982);
In re Yonkers Hamilton Sanitarium, Inc.,
22 Bankr. 427, 435 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1982)
aff'd,
34 Bankr. 385 (S.D.N.Y.1983);
In re Shoppers Paradise, Inc.,
8 Bankr. 271, 278-79 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1980). Lazarus-Willis continued to perform services for the debtor after the filing of the petition. The debtor knew what was happening. The debtor has willingly accepted the benefits of the contract and therefore must also assume the burdens. There is no evidence the debtor requested Lazarus-Willis to cease representing it in the handling of the fire loss. In addition, Mr. Willis testified that he was unaware of the debtor’s bankruptcy petition until after the firm finished working on the fire loss.
On these facts, the Court could either hold that the debtor assumed this contract by its actions and give its approval of that assumption
nunc pro tunc
or hold that the debtor is estopped to deny that it has assumed the contract. The Court adopts the former theory. The debtor’s acceptance of the check coupled with the balance of the debtor’s actions with respect to the Lazarus-Willis agreement constitute an acceptance of that agreement. The Court hereby approves that assumption.
The assumption of the Lazarus-Willis agreement works to give Lazarus-Willis an unsecured first priority administration claim for its fees.
Cf.
11 U.S.C. § 365(g)(2);
In re Concrete Pipe Machinery Co.,
28 Bankr. 837, 841 (Bankr.N.D.Iowa 1983). Ordinarily all unsecured claims, even administration claims, come behind all secured claims. However, § 506(c) of the Bankruptcy Code provides that the trustee is entitled to be reimbursed ahead of a secured creditor from proceeds of collateral that the trustee preserves or sells for the benefit of a secured creditor. In order to justify such an allowance of compensation or expenses, the burden lies with the party asserting the § 506(c) right to prove a quantifiable benefit to the secured creditor.
Brookfield Production Credit Assn. v. Borron,
738 F.2d 951, 953 (8th Cir.1984);
Matter of Trim-X, Inc.,
695 F.2d 296, 299 (7th Cir.1983);
Dozoryst v. First Financial Savings and Loan Assn. of Downers Grove,
21 Bankr. 392, 394 (Bankr.N.D.Ill.1982). Although § 506(c) refers to the trustee’s right to assert such a claim, the caselaw makes it clear that in the appropriate facts and circumstances, a party other than the trustee ought to be able to assert the claim as well. Thus, a debtor-in-possession may also assert this superpriority claim if it proves such a quantifiable benefit.
In re Meat Service Spe
cialties, Inc.,
Bankr. 350, 352 (Bankr.W.D.Okla.1982);
In re Hamilton,
18 Bankr. 868, 873 (Bankr.D.Colo.1982). By the same token an unsecured administration claim creditor who provides quantifiable benefit to a secured creditor and the estate is entitled to a superpriority claim as compensation for its efforts in this regard. It is clear that Lazarus-Willis qualifies for the § 506(c) claim. Because its contract with the debtor was assumed, its claims to compensation under the contract are entitled to administration claim priority.
See N.L.R.B. v. Bildisco and Bildisco,
465 U.S. 513, 104 S.Ct. 1188, 1199, 79 L.Ed.2d 482 (1984).
Lazarus-Willis’s actions provided the Bank with quantifiable benefit. But for the efforts of Lazarus-Willis there would be no fund to be battling over.
Therefore, Lazarus-Willis is entitled to ten percent of the insurance proceeds.
IV.
Conclusion
The Court concludes that Water Tower Trust and Savings Bank’s security interest in the insurance proceeds is superior to that of Alba Sciacqua, and, therefore, that the Bank is entitled to the entire $74,206.09 of the insurance proceeds less the adjuster’s fees allowed by the Court in this opinion. The debtor is ordered to disburse the funds in accordance with the opinion.