Morin v. CERES Corp. (In Re AAPEX Systems, Inc.)

273 B.R. 35, 2002 WL 172027
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 31, 2002
DocketBankruptcy No. 98-20728. Adversary No. 99-2135
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 273 B.R. 35 (Morin v. CERES Corp. (In Re AAPEX Systems, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morin v. CERES Corp. (In Re AAPEX Systems, Inc.), 273 B.R. 35, 2002 WL 172027 (W.D.N.Y. 2002).

Opinion

DECISION & ORDER

JOHN C. NINFO, II, Chief Judge.

BACKGROUND

On February 27, 1998, an involuntary Chapter 7 petition was filed against AA-PEX Systems, Inc. (“AAPEX”). An Order for Relief was entered on March 23, 1998, after AAPEX consented to the relief requested in the involuntary petition, and on April 1, 1998, Lucien A. Morin, II, Esq. was appointed as the Chapter 7 case trustee (the “Trustee”).

AAPEX had been in the business of providing payroll and related services to clients.

After the Order for Relief was entered, former clients of AAPEX filed proofs of claim which asserted that they were owed in excess of one million dollars from AA-PEX because they remained hable for payroll taxes that AAPEX had failed to pay on their behalf pursuant to a Payroll Service Agreement, even though they had paid AAPEX the amount of money necessary to pay their tax liabilities. Some of the proofs of claim also asserted that AAPEX was hable for the penalties and interest that the taxing authorities had assessed against the claimants because AAPEX had failed to pay their payroll taxes when they were due.

Between February 4, 1999 and March 29, 1999, the Trustee commenced fifty-eight separate adversary proceedings against former clients of AAPEX. The Trustee alleged that various transfers made by AAPEX: (1) to the Internal Revenue Service (the “IRS”) or state taxing authorities in order to pay past due payroll taxes or related penalties and interest for those clients; or (2) to the clients, so that they could pay their own past due payroll taxes which AAPEX had failed to pay, were avoidable preferential transfers.

On March 23, 1999, the Trustee commenced an Adversary Proceeding against CERES Corporation (“CERES”) (the “CERES Adversary Proceeding”). In his Complaint against CERES, the Trustee alleged that the payments by .AAPEX to the IRS on behalf of CERES by a December 26, 1997 check in the amount of $32,354.58 (the “Tax Payment”) and a February 11, 1998 check in the amount of $6,204.37 (the “Penalties and Interest Payment”) were avoidable preferential transfers. 1

On December 30, 1999, the Court filed a Decision & Order (the “Section 7501 Trust Decision & Order”), a copy of which is attached , which decided the Motions to Dismiss filed by several other client-defendants in adversary proceedings brought by the Trustee. 2

The Court had limited its findings and holdings in the Section 7501 Trust Decision & Order, at the request of the parties, to the issue of whether the funds transferred by AAPEX were impressed with a Section 7501 Trust. The Court held that the funds, which were commingled and unidentifiable as to source when trans *38 ferred by AAPEX to the IRS or the claimant-defendants during the preference period, were not impressed with a Section 7501 Trust, and, therefore, the holding in Begier v. Internal Revenue Service, 496 U.S. 53, 110 S.Ct. 2258, 110 L.Ed.2d 46 (1990) (“Begier”) could not be extended. 3

In its Section 7501 Trust Decision & Order, the Court noted that one of the steps the claimant-defendants could have taken, which may have made AAPEX jointly and severally liable for the payment of the taxes withheld from the wages of their employees, would have been to insist that the provisions of 26 C.F.R. § 31.3504-1 4 (“Section 3504”) were complied with. This would have required: (1) the completion of IRS Form 2678 (Employer Employment of Agent) (“Form 2678”); and (2) the designation of AAPEX by the appropriate District Director of the IRS as the agent of a claimant-defendant tax payer. That designation would have authorized AAPEX to perform certain acts required of employers and may have made it jointly and severally liable for the payment of withholding taxes when it performed those acts but failed to pay the withholding taxes due.

On May 9, 2001, CERES made a Motion for Summary Judgment (the “CERES Motion for Summary Judgment”) which alleged that: (1) at the time AAPEX made the Tax and Penalties and Interest Payments to the IRS it was acting as the agent for CERES because Form 2678 had been properly completed and AAPEX had been designated as an agent by the appropriate District Director of the IRS; (2) as a designated agent for CERES, AAPEX was jointly and severally liable for the taxes, penalties and interest it paid on behalf of itself and CERES; (3) as a desig *39 nated agent for CERES, AAPEX had the obligation pursuant to Section 7501 to segregate the monies paid to it by CERES for withholding taxes, so AAPEX never had a beneficial interest in the funds paid by CERES to AAPEX to pay its withholding taxes, even if they were commingled by AAPEX; and (4) in accordance with the holding in Begier, once AAPEX made the Tax and Penalties and Interest Payments to the IRS on behalf of itself and CERES, it identified the funds as Section 7501 Trust Funds.

In support of the CERES Motion for Summary Judgment, CERES submitted an IRS certified copy of a completed Form 2678, dated October 1, 1995 (the “CERES/AAPEX Form 2678”). However, the CERES/AAPEX Form 2678 that was submitted was not completed by the IRS designating AAPEX as agent.

In a Statement of Material Facts Not Subject to Genuine Dispute submitted in support of the CERES Motion for Summary Judgment, CERES alleged that: (1) the Debtor regularly, routinely and automatically debited a CERES bank account for the funds necessary to: (a) prepare payroll checks for the employees of CERES; and (b) pay the IRS the payroll taxes withheld from the employees of CERES; (2) AAPEX regularly and routinely prepared payroll checks for the employees of CERES; and (3) AAPEX retained in its account the funds necessary to remit the payroll taxes withheld to the IRS.

On May 15, 2001, the Trustee interposed Opposition to the CERES Motion for Summary Judgment, which was also submitted in support of his own Motion for Summary Judgment (the “Trustee Motion for Summary Judgment”), which asserted that: (1) AAPEX did not segregate the funds it received from CERES to pay its second quarter 1997 withholding taxes, it deposited the funds into its Master Payroll Account; (2) by letter dated April 15, 1997 (the “Termination Letter”), which was more than six months before AAPEX made the Tax and Penalties and Interest Payments, CERES terminated its relationship with AAPEX effective with the payment of an anticipated May 9,1997 payroll; (3) there were at least two times between April 15, 1997, when CERES terminated its relationship with AAPEX, and December 26, 1997, when the Tax Payment was made, when there was an overdraft in the Master Payroll Account, so there were no actual funds of CERES in the Account when AAPEX made the Tax and Penalties and Interest Payment; 5 (4) Begier

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