Northern Capital, Inc. v. Stockton National Bank (In Re Brooke Corp.)

458 B.R. 579, 2011 WL 4543484
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedSeptember 28, 2011
Docket19-10006
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 458 B.R. 579 (Northern Capital, Inc. v. Stockton National Bank (In Re Brooke Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northern Capital, Inc. v. Stockton National Bank (In Re Brooke Corp.), 458 B.R. 579, 2011 WL 4543484 (Kan. 2011).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING STOCKTON NATIONAL BANK’S MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT

DALE L. SOMERS, Bankruptcy Judge.

When the Trustee seeks to avoid allegedly preferential transfers that partially satisfied debtor’s loan held by a lead bank subject to participation agreements and the lead bank transmitted the payments to the participants in accord with the participation agreements, is the lead bank the initial transferee under 11 U.S.C. § 550(a)(1) 1 ? This is a question of first impression presented by third-party defendant Stockton National Bank’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. 2 The Court has jurisdiction. 3

FINDINGS OF FACT.

The material facts are uncontroverted. On December 28, 2007, Debtor Brooke Corporation, Inc. (hereafter “Brooke”) executed a promissory note, due June 28, 2008, in favor of Stockton National Bank (hereafter “Stockton”) for $4,500,000 (hereafter “Note”), with interest at the rate of 10.5%, and a Security Agreement that provided security for the Note. Brooke had proposed the loan to Stockton, solicited the loan to the others who were interested in purchasing an undivided interest in the loan, and brought potential participants to Stockton. On the same date, Stockton entered into eight separate, but substantially identical forms, entitled Participation Certificate and Agreement (hereafter “Agreements” or “Certificates”), with Third-Party Defendants Alliant Bank, the Bank of Commerce and Trust Co., Mid *583 west Community Bank, Milledgeville State Bank, Iowa State Bank, First National Bank of Smith Center, Farley State Bank, and First Community Bank (hereafter collectively “Participants”). The Participants’ aggregate percentage ownership of the Note and all related security entitle them to 94.44% of Brooke’s payments on the Note (less applicable fees and expenses), and Stockton’s retained ownership interest entitles it to 5.56% of any Brooke payment. On August 7, 2008, with the consent of the Participants, Brooke executed and delivered to Stockton an extension of the Note and a revision to the security agreement.

Each Agreement identifies Stockton as the “Originating Lender (Seller)” and the participant as “Participating Lender (Purchaser).” It then describes the Brooke Note as evidencing the “Loan” in favor of Seller and provides that in “consideration of the sum of $... (Purchaser’s Investment) Seller hereby sells and certifies to Purchaser an undivided ... percent interest (Share), without recourse to Seller, in the Principal and interest hereafter accruing from the Loan.” Each sale includes the Purchaser’s share in all notes and other instruments evidencing indebtedness of Borrower in the Loan, together with all security interests in the Property securing such indebtedness. Each participant agrees to fund its portion of the Loan by forwarding the investment to Stockton and is entitled to interest at 10.25 percent on its participation interest. “Purchaser and Seller agree that Purchaser will be considered for all purposes the legal and equitable owner of the above Share in the Loan, related documents, and Property and will possess all applicable rights, privileges and remedies, subject to other provisions of this Agreement.” Seller retains the duties of holding the Loan documentation and of administering the Loan; it is entitled to an administrative fee of 25 basis points. Such administration may be undertaken as if Seller were the sole owner and holder of the Loan. Seller’s duty to the Purchasers is to use the same degree of care in servicing and collecting the Loan as it would for its own account, with liability only for acts in bad faith or willful misconduct. As to payments on the Loan, the Certificates provide that “Seller will receive all Payments and apply them to Borrower’s account. Payments received by Seller under the Loan will be held for the benefit of Seller and Purchaser until the payments are actually paid to and received by Purchaser.” Stockton is required to make such distributions no later than the close of the tenth business day following receipt, subject to a penalty if funds were not remitted in accord with the Agreement.

At issue are three payments in the total amount of $487,973.29 which Stockton received from Brooke within 90 days before Brooke filed its bankruptcy petition. The payments were comprised of wire transfers of $150,000.00 and of $38,835.62 received on August 4, 2008; a check dated August 15, 2008 for $260,000 received on August 18, 2008; and a check for $39,137.67 dated August 29, 2008 received on August 29, 2008, which did not clear until September 3, 2008. Stockton retained $27,958.58 for its share of the participation and for administrative fees and timely distributed $460,014.71 to the Participants within one day of receiving the wire transfers or within one day of the checks clearing. At the time of the payments, Stockton maintained a correspondent banking relationship with Bankers’ Bank of Kansas. All payments from Brooke and distributions to the Participants were processed through Stockton’s account at Banker’s Bank, without segregation of the funds attributable to the Loan from other transactions of Stockton.

*584 Stockton filed a proof of claim on November 25, 2008 in the Debtor’s bankruptcy in the amount of $4,179,399.95 based upon a default judgment on the Note.

THE TRUSTEE’S CLAIM, STOCKTON’S MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT, AND THE POSITIONS OF THE PARTIES.

The claims asserted in this adversary proceeding include a Third-Party Complaint by the Trustee which, among other things, seeks to avoid and recover from Stockton the foregoing payments of $478,973.29 paid by Brooke on the Note as preferential transfers under § 547 from Stockton. The matter before the Court is Stockton’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. 4 Stockton asserts that even if the Trustee could prove that the $487,973.29 in payments made to Stockton were preferential payments, Stockton had no legal dominion and control over $460,014.71 of the payments received and, with respect to these payments which were disbursed to the Participants, acted as a mere conduit so that it does not have liability to the Trustee as to these transfers as an initial transferee under § 550(a)(1). 5

The Participants oppose the Motion, asserting that Stockton was the initial transferee as to all the payments and not a mere conduit for various reasons, including the fact the Stockton was the payee of the Note. 6 The Trustee in his initial brief opposed the Motion, 7 but in a sur-reply brief changed his position and stated, “[T]o the extent this Court determines that the Certificates divested Stockton of the legal ability to exercise dominion and control over the funds paid to the Participants, such divestiture precludes Stockton from becoming an initial transferee to the extent of the funds it was contractually obligated and did actually transfer to the Participants.” 8

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Bluebook (online)
458 B.R. 579, 2011 WL 4543484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-capital-inc-v-stockton-national-bank-in-re-brooke-corp-ksb-2011.