Reagor-Dykes Motors, LP

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedMarch 19, 2020
Docket18-50214
StatusUnknown

This text of Reagor-Dykes Motors, LP (Reagor-Dykes Motors, LP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reagor-Dykes Motors, LP, (Tex. 2020).

Opinion

ER CLERK, U.S. BANKRUPTCY COURT kr Sa NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS Sl Qe8e ‘2\ +|\ \y peers lx 4, ZETA OS sy |: THE DATE OF ENTRY IS ON iA Oe AMI ‘i THE COURT’S DOCKET Oy dil NAY ‘Ys OY The following constitutes the ruling of the court and has the force and effect therein described.

Signed March 18, 2020 . ° United States Bankruptcy Judge

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS LUBBOCK DIVISION IN RE: § § REAGOR-DYKES MOTORS, LP,! § CASE NO. 18-50214-rlj11 § Jointly Administered

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Edward Mitchell moves to enforce the Court’s order of April 26, 2019 [Doc. No. 1216]

' The following chapter 11 cases are jointly administered under Case No. 18-50214: Reagor-Dykes Motors, L.P., Reagor-Dykes Imports, LP (Case No. 18-50215), Reagor-Dykes Amarillo, LP (Case No. 18-50216), Reagor-Dykes Auto Company, LP (Case No. 18-50217), Reagor-Dykes Plainview, LP (Case No. 18-50218), Reagor-Dykes Floydada, LP (Case No. 18-50219), Reagor-Dykes Snyder, L.P. (Case No. 18-50321), Reagor-Dykes ITI LLC (Case No. 18-50322), Reagor-Dykes IIT LLC (Case No. 18-50323), Reagor Auto Mall, Ltd. (Case No. 18-50324), and Reagor Auto Mall I LLC (Case No. 18-50325). Six of the “Reagor-Dykes” entities—Reagor-Dykes Motors, LP, Reagor-Dykes Imports, LP, Reagor-Dykes Amarillo, LP, Reagor-Dykes Auto Company, LP, Reagor-Dykes Plainview, LP, and Reagor-Dykes Floydada, LP— filed chapter 11 on August 1, 2018; the other five entities—Reagor-Dykes Snyder, L.P., Reagor-Dykes III LLC, Reagor-Dykes II LLC, Reagor Auto Mall, Ltd. (RAM), and Reagor Auto Mall I LLC—filed on November 2, 2018. The bankruptcy filings were precipitated by a suit filed by Ford Motor Credit Company LLC (FMCC) against various Reagor-Dykes entities in Federal District Court on July 31, 2018, in which FMCC charged Reagor-Dykes with having sold $40 million of vehicles “out of trust.” FMCC was Reagor-Dykes’s major “floorplan” lender for the purchase of new-car inventory for certain Reagor-Dykes dealerships. The $40 million-out-of-trust sales mean that FMCC was not paid as required on its financing. Reagor-Dykes submits that the FMCC suit and the bankruptcy filings caused, in some instances, certain retail lenders (to consumers) to fail to fund the loan proceeds to Reagor-Dykes; and, in other sales where the funds were deposited in Reagor-Dykes accounts, the banks froze the funds and “presumably applied such funds to debts that they say were allegedly owed to them by the Debtors.” Doc. No. 1147 at 2. There were hundreds, perhaps thousands, of instances in which Reagor-Dykes failed to pay the tax, title, and license fees and the debt on vehicles traded-in by innocent consumers.

that approved an agreement between the Reagor-Dykes debtor entities and the Lubbock County Tax Assessor-Collector.2 Mitchell only wants to register the 2018 Toyota Tundra (Tundra) that he is driving under a lease agreement he signed with Reagor Auto Mall, Ltd. d/b/a Prime Capital Auto Lease (RAM) four days before certain of the Reagor-Dykes entities filed bankruptcy.3 Mitchell is unable to register the Tundra because Family Toyota Dealership Group, LLC d/b/a

Family Toyota of Burleson (Family Toyota) refuses to release the Tundra’s manufacturer’s certificate of origin (MSO), which is needed for registration. I. In late July 2018, Edward Mitchell leased the Tundra from RAM. The Closed End Motor Vehicle Lease is dated July 26, 2018. Mitchell’s Ex. 2. As is common with consumer financing of vehicles, the “Lease and all rights and title to the Vehicle” were assigned, here to MUSA Auto Leasing (MUSA). Id. at 4. MUSA paid RAM $56,892.67 for the Tundra and the Lease. Mitchell’s Ex. 1 at 2. But the purchase (or lease) of a vehicle by a consumer can be, as it is here, complicated. RAM did not have on its lot the particular Tundra that Mitchell wanted. To

accommodate Mitchell, RAM obtained a Tundra for Mitchell as part of a “dealer trade” with Family Toyota. RAM sent Family Toyota a 2018 Toyota Tacoma at a cost of $27,025; and Family Toyota sent RAM the desired Tundra at a cost of $45,417.55. Family Toyota’s Ex. 2. Rather than pay the difference, each of RAM and Family Toyota was obligated to pay the other the full purchase price for the vehicle obtained in the trade. Mitchell traded-in a 2017 Ram pickup as part of the deal. Mitchell’s Ex. 2. The Lease reflects that the “Net Trade-In Allowance” is zero: both the balance of the debt owing on the Ram and its value were $39,530. Id. Mitchell paid $1,789.89 on the Lease at signing. Id.

2 All “Doc. No.” references herein are to Case No. 18-50214. 3 See supra note 1. The Tundra was delivered to RAM and then, per the terms of the Lease, to Mitchell. The Tacoma was delivered to Family Toyota; Family Toyota paid RAM the $27,025. RAM failed to pay Family Toyota for the Tundra. It also failed to deliver to Family Toyota the proper title document, the MSO, on the Tacoma. And though Mitchell testified that he has had no repercussions regarding the Dodge Ram that he traded-in, the Court surmises that RAM failed to

pay the outstanding debt on it, as well. Mitchell has been making the regular lease payments to MUSA, but neither MUSA nor RAM has properly registered the Tundra. Mitchell, therefore, has had to pay for temporary plates so that he can legally drive the Tundra. He testified that he has paid $30 a month for sixteen months. Family Toyota holds the documents of title but refuses to provide them to Mitchell. Family Toyota is disinclined to help because it has never been paid for the Tundra, it is not receiving lease payments, and it paid for the Tacoma that it could not sell given RAM’s failure to provide the MSO. Family Toyota filed its proof of claim in the RAM and Reagor-Dykes Motors, LP cases.

Case No. 18-50214, Claim No. 146-1; Case No. 18-50324, Claim No. 58-1. The proof reflects it has an unsecured claim of $45,417.55 that arose from its sale of the Tundra to RAM. II. Mitchell is asking that the Court require Family Toyota and RAM to provide the MSO to MUSA so that the Tundra can properly be registered and thus avoid his having to continue to pay for temporary plates. Family Toyota refuses to do so because, as it says, “Family Toyota was never paid for the Vehicle.” Doc. No. 1579 at 3 (emphasis in original). Mitchell argues that Family Toyota consigned the Tundra to RAM or, alternatively, entrusted it with RAM. In either event, Mitchell argues that he has rights superior to Family Toyota’s to the Tundra as an innocent purchaser (or lessee) for value. Family Toyota says that the Tundra was neither consigned nor entrusted by Family Toyota to RAM. And, as Family Toyota was never paid for the Tundra, Family Toyota contends that the sale of the Tundra to RAM was never effected. Family Toyota presently holds the MSO or certificate of title. RAM says that it has a copy of an MSO but that such copy “is void because, upon information and belief, Family Toyota took

action to have a duplicate MSO/title issued in the name of Family Toyota that supersedes the MSO in the possession of the Debtors and renders it void.” Doc. No. 1581 at 2. Mitchell asks the Court to require that Family Toyota comply with the following provision from the Court’s April 26, 2019 order: [A]ll persons in possession of certificates of titles (“Titles”) or manufacturer’s certificates of origin (“MSOs”) for vehicles (i) sold (arguably or inarguably) by Reagor-Dykes Auto Group and (ii) that still need to be registered for the buyer (“Vehicles”) shall provide the Debtors with a list of all such Titles and MSOs in their possession within five (5) days from entry of this Order.

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