Mosier v. Irvine Co. (In Re IRFM, Inc.)

138 B.R. 595, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 433, 1992 WL 59027
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California
DecidedMarch 24, 1992
DocketBankruptcy No. SA 88-04423 JR, Adv. No. SA 91-3951 JR
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 138 B.R. 595 (Mosier v. Irvine Co. (In Re IRFM, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mosier v. Irvine Co. (In Re IRFM, Inc.), 138 B.R. 595, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 433, 1992 WL 59027 (Cal. 1992).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

JOHN E. RYAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

Trustee filed an adversary complaint seeking to recover payments made to defendant as the initial transferee under Bankruptcy Code (the “Code”) § 550(a)(1). Trustee’s complaint includes claims based on Code § 547(b) and seeks recovery of payments that occurred between 90 days and one year prior to the filing of debtor’s bankruptcy petition (the “insider period”).

Defendant filed a motion to dismiss and/or strike for failure to state a claim portions of trustee’s complaint alleging preferential payments during the insider period. After a hearing on January 2, 1992, I took the matter under submission.

JURISDICTION

The Court has jurisdiction over this adversary proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1334(a) (the district courts shall have original and exclusive jurisdiction of all cases under Title 11), 28 U.S.C. § 157(a) (authorizing the district courts to refer all Title 11 cases and proceedings to the bankruptcy judges for the district) and General Order No. 266, dated October 9, 1984 (referring all Title 11 cases and proceedings to the bankruptcy judges for the Central District of California). This matter is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(F).

STATEMENT OF FACTS

Debtor, IRFM, Inc. (formerly the Irvine Ranch Farmers Market), filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 11 of the Code on July 22, 1988. The case was later converted to Chapter 7 on approximately October 3, 1989.

Defendant, debtor’s lessor on certain commercial property, received payments to-talling $1,289,040.70 during the year preceding the filing of debtor’s petition. Debt- or’s president had guaranteed debtor’s lease payments.

Trustee seeks to recover all payments made within one year of the filing of the bankruptcy. Defendant’s motion to dismiss and/or strike asserts that trustee’s *597 attempt to recover payments made to defendant during the insider period relies solely on the Seventh Circuit’s interpretation of §§ 547 and 550- as set forth in Levit v. Ingersoll Rand Financial Corporation (In re V.N. Deprizio Co.), 874 F.2d 1186 (7th Cir.1989), and that Deprizio is incorrectly decided.

DISCUSSION

While three circuits have adopted the Deprizio analysis 1 , the Ninth Circuit has not decided the Deprizio issue.

The Seventh Circuit’s decision in Depri-zio held that a transfer by a debtor made during the insider period to a non-insider creditor who holds a guarantee from an insider of a debtor is an avoidable preference under § 547(b) 2 , which can be recovered by the trustee from the non-insider creditor under § 550(a). 3 874 F.2d at 1201.

In reaching its decision, the Deprizio court rejected the “two-transfer” theory and the equity and policy arguments asserted by the non-insider creditor. Instead, the court applied a “plain language” analysis to the avoidance and recovery functions of §§ 547 and 550. The Supreme Court set forth this approach to statutory construction in United States v. Ron Pair Enterprises, Inc., 489 U.S. 235, 109 S.Ct 1026, 103 L.Ed.2d 290 (1989).

The bankruptcy court in Deprizio used the two-transfer -theory to deny recovery against the non-insider creditor for transfers during the insider period. 4 Id. at 1195-6. The two-transfer theory holds that a transfer occurs with each payment to the non-insider creditor holding a guarantee from an insider, and a separate, distinct transfer also takes place with each “benefit received” by the insider guarantor that results from each payment to the non-insider creditor. Each “transfer” is then separately analyzed as a possible preference. The bankruptcy court adopted this approach in denying recovery against the non-insider creditor for the transfers made during the insider period based on the creditor’s non-insider status. In rejecting this approach, the Seventh Circuit noted that the Code equates a “transfer” to a payment: 5

*598 a transfer is a disposition of property. Section 547 and 550 both speak of a transfer being avoided; avoidability is an attribute of the transfer rather than of the creditor. While the lenders want to define transfer from the recipients’ perspectives, the Code consistently defines it from the debtor’s. A single payment therefore is one “transfer”, no matter how many persons gain thereby.

Id. at 1195-6 (footnotes omitted).

The court then applied a two-step analysis, first focusing on whether there were preferential transfers under § 547(b). The court affirmed the district court’s determination that there were preferential transfers. It found that the insider guarantor was a creditor 6 of the debtor who, by reducing his potential obligation as guarantor, had benefitted from the payments to the non-insider creditor. Since the guarantor was an insider of the debtor, the reach-back period was one year as provided in § 547(b)(4)(B). Id. at 1201.

The court then turned to § 550(a) and, relying on its plain language, determined that the trustee could recover against the non-insider creditor as the “initial transferee” of the preferential transfers. Id. In other words, the payments made to the non-insider creditor for the period up to one year prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy were made for the benefit of the insider guarantor and were preferential, avoidable and recoverable from the non-insider creditor.

The court rejected the non-insider creditor’s argument that since the legislative history gave no helpful guidance, Congress intended to preserve the pre-Code practice of only allowing recovery from those parties to whom the transfer represented a preference. Id. at 1196. The court concluded that “[w]hen Congress makes wholesale changes in the text and structure of the law, it is fatuous to pretend that a silent legislative history means that existing practices should continue unchanged.” Id. It then noted that separating the identification of voidable transfers (§ 547) from the identification of who must pay (§ 550) in the 1978 Code was “a structural change with no antecedents in the 1898 Act.” 7 Id.

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Bluebook (online)
138 B.R. 595, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 433, 1992 WL 59027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mosier-v-irvine-co-in-re-irfm-inc-cacb-1992.